The command room buzzed with activity again, though the vibe was far lighter now. Kiana was nowhere to be seenâprobably still clinging to Vermond like a divine koala somewhere. Erie, however, was busy leaning on the edge of the display table, popping some crunchy protein snacks into his mouth with a smirk.
At the center, Jard had both hands up in the air, practically dancing in front of the holographic projection of the black hole. Charts, simulations, and questionable orbital paths spun like a psychedelic storm around him.
âI call this maneuverâ¦â Jard paused for dramatic flair, âthe Spiral of Genius!â
Ruen, seated across the room with a mug of synth-coffee, raised an eyebrow. âDid you just make that up?â
âYes,â Jard said proudly. âBut the math doesnât lie! If we stabilize the station using its four main thrusters in reverse polarity while compensating for frame-dragging caused by the black holeâs ergosphere, we can literally orbit doom itself.â
Erie squinted at the diagrams, then leaned to Ruen. âDoes this guy sound smart, or is he just making noises with big words?â
âI think both,â Ruen said, sipping slowly. âBut I like his confidence.â
âThank you,â Jard said, without looking. âAlso, I heard that.â
He spun around and pointed at a rough model of the station hovering above the black hole. âLook, if we anchor the railgun directly to the rotational path, and calculate timing just right, the gravity sling can add power to our shots. Weâre talking god-slaying projectiles.â
Erie crossed his arms. âYou mean weâll be spinning like a pizza around a black hole, and hoping we donât become toppings?â
âExactly!â Jard said cheerfully. âBut with style.â
Ruen sighed. âJust donât vaporize us. I have laundry in the synth-washer.â
Suddenly the simulation spun out of control, the station model slamming into the event horizon with comical sound effects Jard had definitely added himself. âOkay okay okay,â he waved. âMinor miscalculation. Maybe donât trust the decimal point I rounded down...â
Erie blinked. âYou did what now?â
Ruen just chuckled. âWeâre all gonna die.â
Jard puffed his chest. âNot before I make this station the first ever sniper nest orbiting the edge of time itself.â
ââ¦Kinda cool when he says it like that,â Erie muttered.
âStill terrifying,â Ruen added.
They all turned back to the swirling simulation, and despite the jokes and the looming gravitational annihilation, they couldn't help but admire Jardâs sheer insanity.
And somewhere, from one of the hallways, came Kianaâs voice sweetly echoing:
âBig brother, donât forget to rest~!â
Erie whispered, âNow thatâs the scary one.â
Jard stood up front with a marker in hand, ignoring the sound, scribbling on the holo-board with passionate ferocity. âWe can attach a reinforced relay into the edge of the gravity well. If we succeed, itâll be the first data and power siphon node ever installed that close to a black hole.â
Ruen raised a brow. âAnd if we fail?â
âWe become a part of history. Very, very flattened history.â
Erie gave a short laugh. âWell, at least Iâll die next to you meatheads.â
Jard nodded solemnly. âThatâs the spirit.â
Then, the automatic doors whooshed open.
Vermond entered, composed and quiet, with Kiana clinging delicately to his arm. Her presence was etherealâwhite hair flowing like nebula threads, eyes soft yet glowing with hidden fire. She held a small bento box in one hand and was gently feeding her brother slices of fruit and warm bread, all while standing beside him like a priestess beside a god.
Jard gave a low whistle under his breath. â...Did he marry a divine being and not tell us?â
Erie snorted. âDonât say that too loud. Sheâll start glowing again.â
Kiana smiled sweetly at everyoneâtoo sweet. âDonât mind me. Big brother needs energy for thinking. Go on.â
Vermond ignored the awkward tension and sat at the central table. âWhatâs the current plan?â
Ruen brought up the display. âWeâve mapped a trajectory where the destroyer can sneak a device into the upper drag zone of the black holeâs pullâjust far enough to stay stable. Jard thinks we can tether it to the station with cable fused to power anchors.â
Jard spun around. âItâs crazy. And beautiful. And I think itâs going to work.â
Kiana held a piece of food in front of Vermondâs lips. He ate quietly.
âWeâll ride the destroyer into position,â Vermond said, eyes narrowing at the swirling blackness in the center of the map. âWeâll deploy the relay manually.â
Erie frowned. âIs that wise? The gravity aloneââ
âIâll use the energy field to stabilize the drop. Itâs risky, but the reward is worth it.â
Ruen tapped his fingers. âAnd nobodyâs gonna mention how casually he drops field now? Cool. Great. Love that.â
Erie stood near the back, arms crossed, eyeing Kiana as she wiped a crumb from Vermondâs lip with a gentle smile.
Jard leaned close to him. âThat girlâs... something else.â
âYou have no idea,â Erie muttered.
âSo,â Vermond continued, rising from his seat with calm authority. âWe ready the destroyer. Ruen, begin prepping the tether module. Jard, finalize orbit calculations.â
He glanced at Erie, eyes glinting. âYouâre coming with me. As always.â
âAnd Kiana?â Ruen asked.
Kiana simply smiled and tightened her grip on Vermondâs hand.
âI go wherever Big Brother goes.â
Nobody dared argue.
Minutes later..
The hangar bay buzzed with activity. Crews ran diagnostics on the undead destroyer. Anchor cables were being coiled and recalibrated. Tension hung in the airâbut not because of the mission.
No, the real tension was in one corner of the observation deck, where Kiana sat gracefully on Vermondâs lap like it was her personal throne.
She was feeding himâagain.
With every bite of fruit she placed in Vermondâs mouth, the temperature in the room seemed to drop⦠or maybe that was just the cold envy radiating from three very lonely men.
Jard leaned over to Ruen. âYou seeing this?â
âI wish I wasnât,â Ruen said flatly, arms crossed, trying not to look.
Erie, arms limp at his side, was slouched dramatically against a pillar. âBro... Iâm gonna implode like the black hole.â
Vermond sat there, calm as usual, gently chewing as Kiana lovingly wiped his cheek with a soft cloth.
âYouâre eating like a prince,â Jard grumbled under his breath. âDo you even know how to lift your own spoon anymore?â
âShhh,â Kiana whispered without even looking at them. âBig Brother is focusing on the mission.â
âHeâs focusing on the peach in your fingers!â Erie exploded.
â...And now sheâs giving him tea. From her own cup,â Ruen added in disbelief.
They all just watched as Vermond, unfazed, took a sip from the same cup Kiana sipped from.
Ruen cracked. âOkay, this is officially illegal.â
âI need a girlfriend,â Erie mumbled into his hand.
Jard nodded. âSame.â
Ruen stared at his empty hands. âI held a wrench all morning. Thatâs the only thing that touched me today.â
Erie flopped onto a nearby crate. âWe need a support group. 'Lonely Command Bros Anonymous.' Weekly meetings. Snacks provided.â
Kiana, still seated comfortably, gave them a radiant smile. âYou canât force love, Misters. It must blossom... like a star.â
Erie stood and dramatically pointed at Vermond. âYou! Stop being so attractive and mysterious and emotionally complex!â
Vermond raised an eyebrow. âIâm literally just eating.â
âWhile a beautiful girl is perched on you like a goddess on a throne!â
Jard threw his hands up. âAt this point, Iâd settle for a girl who stabs me as long as she looks at me afterward.â
âI got stabbed once,â Ruen muttered. âShe still didnât like me.â
There was a long pause.
Then Vermond finally spoke, calm and cold. âFocus on the mission.â
Kiana nuzzled into his shoulder. âMy focused Big Brother is so dreamy.â
Erie collapsed again. âIâm done. Emotionally. Spiritually.â
Ruen sighed. âIâm orbiting depression faster than weâre orbiting the black hole.â
Jard looked at his datapad. âYou think if I rename this fusion core 'Girlfriend.exe' Iâll feel better?â
They all groaned in tragic unity.
And then..
The undead destroyer thrummed quietly as systems came online. Engines idled, glowing faintly. Ruen leaned against the wall of the boarding corridor, helmet tucked under his arm. Jard tapped nervously at a datapad. Erie just sat, legs dangling off a crate, staring at the hatch like it had personally wronged him.
âWhere are they?â Ruen asked, voice flat, heart already wounded.
âI swear,â Erie muttered. âIf sheâs feeding him againâ¦â
The doors finally hissed open.
Step. Step. Radiant aura.
Vermond walked in like a shadow given form. And right beside himâKiana, glowing like a celestial being, holding a tray of sliced fruit with one hand⦠and Vermondâs hand with the other.
She stopped mid-step, picked a piece of fruit with delicate fingers, and lifted it toward Vermondâs lips.
Everyone watched in silence.
Vermond chewed with the same impassive expression as always, but Kiana beamed like she just saved a galaxy. Then, out of nowhere, she leaned in and kissed his cheek.
Smack.
Erie immediately turned around, covering his face.
Ruen slid down the wall, knees to his chest.
Jard stared into the distance. âI used to believe in hopeâ¦â
Kiana gave a cheerful, âLetâs do our best today!â before skipping ahead, pulling Vermond along.
As they passed, she gave the other three a sweet smile.
Erie wiped a tear. âSheâs too powerful.â
âSheâs not even trying!â Jard choked out. âThat kissâit had AOE effects! I felt it in my spine!â
âIâm emotionally divorced from life,â Ruen muttered.
Then, the shipâs internal speakers came on. Kianaâs voice chimed:
âEveryone, please focus on your work. Big Brother and I are rooting for you.â
Erie stared at the speaker. âI canât take this. Iâm gonna start rooting for the black hole.â
Ruen nodded solemnly. âLet it take me.â
Jard stared down at the console. âIâm installing dating apps in this frigginâ railgun.â
The undead destroyer undocked smoothly from the massive space station, its cloaking systems already active. In the distance, the black hole shimmered like a sleeping god, ripples of twisted gravity warping starlight in every direction. The atmosphere inside the bridge was calm⦠serious.
Except for one thing.
Kiana was, once again, on Vermondâs lapâlegs elegantly folded, arms loosely wrapped around his neck, her cheek softly resting against his shoulder as if she had claimed her seat permanently. Her green eyes flicked from screen to screen with faint interest.
Everyone else was too politeâor too terrifiedâto say anything.
Jard stood in front of the holotable, gesturing as the 3D projection of the black hole twisted and shifted. âThis zone here is the edge of the event horizon. We need to place the energy siphoning node in a stable orbit, just outside the danger threshold.â
Vermond nodded calmly, his chin gently brushing against Kianaâs hair. âHow long will it take for the module to anchor?â
âSix hours minimum,â Jard replied. âIf the pull doesnât destabilize the graviton scaffolding, weâll be safe.â
Kiana tilted her head up. âThen weâll be watching the node for six hours⦠together.â
Erie rubbed his face with both hands.
Ruenâs helmet fell from his lap.
Jard continued, eyes twitching. âUh⦠yes, well. The ship must stay within a calculable range to relay coordinates and provide backup gravitational support. Weâll need a team to suit up and deploy the module.â
âIâll do it,â Erie volunteered quicklyâprobably just to get away.
âIâll go with him,â Ruen muttered, arms crossed.
Kiana gently ran her fingers through Vermondâs hair. âBig brother can stay here. Iâll make sure heâs comfortable.â
Vermond, silent as ever, tapped a finger to his lips thoughtfully. âGood. We stay on command. Erie, Ruen, take three elites with you. Jard, guide them remotely.â
Kiana whispered beside his ear, âIâll guide you too⦠through the stars.â
Erie dropped his helmet. âIâmâ Iâm seriously gonna lose it.â
Ruen was already halfway out the door.
Minutes later...
Erie leaned back against a console, arms crossed, while Ruen mimicked him with a pout. The two had taken up roles⦠suspiciously familiar roles.
âAlright,â Erie said, deepening his voice mockingly. âYou be Kiana, Iâll be Vermond.â
Ruen deadpanned. âWhy am I Kiana?â
âBecause youâve got that silent, moody energy today.â
âIâm always like this.â
âExactly.â
Ruen rolled his eyes and then, with the grace of a wooden plank, wrapped his arms around Erieâs neck and said in the most monotone voice imaginable, âBig brother⦠feed me space grapesâ¦â
Erie nearly lost it laughing but composed himself, clearing his throat dramatically. âOf course, little sister. Let me just fire the god-tier railgun while you sit on my lap.â
They both cracked upâuntil Jard walked in.
He stood frozen in the doorway, blinking at the scene before him: Erie with one arm outstretched like some dramatic romantic lead, and Ruen awkwardly perched half-sideways in front of him like a broken mannequin mid-hug.
ââ¦Do I even want to know?â Jard finally asked.
Erie turned, all confidence. âWeâre practicing tactics.â
Ruen gave a thumbs-up. âEmotional warfare.â
Jard pinched the bridge of his nose. âYou two need girlfriends.â
Erie shrugged. âWeâre just trying to keep up with that.â He pointed to the other side of the bridge where Kiana was happily curled on Vermondâs lap again, gently brushing crumbs from his collar.
Vermond didnât even look up. âFocus on the mission.â
Kiana looked at them with a smug smile. âYou two look adorable together. Just saying.â
Erieâs face went pale.
Ruen muttered, âWeâre never going to live this downâ¦â
Jard backed away slowly, muttering, âIâm going back to the black hole calculations. At least space doesnât judge me.â
They then began to move.
âWeâll need to deploy stabilizers every 400 meters to survive in a stable orbit without being pulled apart,â Jard muttered. âOne miscalculation, and the whole station becomes stardust.â
Vermondâs eyes didnât leave the display. âHow close can we push it without crossing the red line?â
Jard tapped on the interface. âIf we get this right, close enough to siphon power from the accretion disc itselfâbut weâll need to build a shielding grid. Energy output will be insane. But the heat and pressureâ¦â
Kiana smiled faintly. âThatâs why we have you, Jard. We believe in you.â
Erieâs voice crackled from the engineering bay through the internal comms, âHey! Ruen and I are already moving materials and prepping shielding frames. Just say the word and weâll start the external rigging.â
Then, another voice buzzed in, louderâand grumpier.
Old man Renn.
âWhat the hell is this?! You left me behind?! Iâm looking at the logs and I see my ship docked, but nobody told me the destroyer was headed out!â
Vermond exhaled. âRennâ¦â
âDonât âRennâ me, you soul-eating brat! Who do you think helped keep your station from collapsing into itself? You think I canât help aim your oversized death cannon? And where the hellâs my chair?!â
Jard muttered with a half-smile, âI warned you not to remove his personal mug.â
Kiana pressed a button. âWeâre nearing the final planning phase, Renn. Weâll update you on everything and bring you in for calibration. Youâre important.â
ââ¦I want a snack waiting for me.â
Kiana looked at Vermond.
He smirked. âIâll send Erieâs cooking.â
A pause.
âFine. But I better not find out you all took off because you couldnât handle my brilliance.â
The comm went silent again.
Vermond stood, finally breaking the still tension. âJard, you handle the orbital math. Kiana and I will begin synchronizing energy pulse parameters.â
Jard nodded.
âErie, Ruen,â Vermond called through the comms again, âGet the outer plates ready. Weâll be dancing close to the fire.â
âAye aye, commander!â Erie replied, a rare seriousness in his tone.
Hours had passed since arrival. Coordinates double-checked. Stabilizers anchored. Now, it was time.
Inside the command room, Jard leaned forward at the console, sweat on his brow despite the chill. âStabilization grid is active. Orbital rotation is holding. Begin deployment⦠now.â
Through the external cams, the first massive siphon spires unfolded from the destroyerâs underbellyâmonolithic black structures laced with glowing crimson veins, humming with undead resonance.
Erieâs voice came through. âRig A secured. No interference from the field so far. Ruen, howâs Rig B?â
Ruen replied, âStabilizers are shaking but holding. Feels like weâre trying to mine the heart of a dying god.â
Inside the command chamber, Vermond stood tall, arms crossed. Kiana clung lightly to his side, her expression calm but eyes blazing with silent joyâjust being near him. She turned to Jard with a gentle smile. âAny anomalies?â
Jard wiped his palms on his coat. âAside from dancing on the edge of annihilation? No. Systems stable. First siphon should hit energy resonance in tenâ¦â
The countdown began. Lights flickered slightly as the spires pierced the vacuum between normal space and the black holeâs edge. The air vibrated.
Erie spoke again, slightly amazed, âWeâre... pulling energy. This is working. Itâs actually working.â
Then it happened.
The siphons lit up like veins struck by lightning, each pulsing with chaotic, luminous energy drawn straight from the swirling maelstrom beyond. Power surged through the destroyerâs main conduit lines. Monitors flared as numbers spiked.
Jard laughed. âWe did it! The system's handling it! I can't believeâHA! Weâre sucking the universeâs soul!â
Kiana leaned closer into Vermond, whispering softly, âYouâre amazing, Big Brother⦠This power⦠only someone like you could command it.â
Vermond simply watched, expression calm, but something dark burned quietly behind his glowing eyes. Power⦠yes. But it always came with cost.
Suddenly, Ruenâs voice buzzed in, lower. âUh⦠you guys might want to see this.â
On the side display, a new blip appeared at the edge of the siphon zoneânot a ship, not debris.
Something was waking up.
Jardâs grin slowly faded. â...What the hell is that?â
Kianaâs face was unreadable. She slowly placed her hand on Vermondâs. âItâs coming.â
The air grew heavy. The temperature didnât changeâbut something far worse did.
A soundâno, a presenceâpushed through the silence of space. It echoed through hull plating, sensors, even the walls of the soul.
A low, thunderous roar.
Ancient. Deep. Alive.
Jardâs hands flew over controls. âWhat the hell is that?! Thatâs not turbulence!â
The monitors flickered. Readouts went insane. The destroyerâs stabilizers strained, metal creaking. The station, though distant, was visibly pulling off-axisâdrawn toward the void like a ship caught in a tide.
Erie shouted, âThatâs not a flareâitâs awake! The damn thing is awake! This is not natural physics!â
Ruen yelled, âPull us out! Pull the spires! Jard, disengage now!â
Vermond narrowed his eyes, glowing with faint numbers. His instincts screamed that this was more than gravity. Something within the blackhole had stirred⦠something that noticed them.
Comms sparked to life. Rennâs voice blared.
âYou kids better tell me whatâs going on! The whole stationâs rattling like a goddamn tin can in a cyclone! What did you do?!â
But before anyone could respondâ
Kiana stood calmly, a serene smile on her face.
She moved slowly to the viewport. Her emerald eyes shimmered, and for a moment, she looked⦠older. Eternal. Something else.
She gently touched the glass, looking out at the swirling darkness now reaching for them.
"He's awake," she whispered, almost lovingly.
Everyone turned to her.
âKiana?â Vermond asked, voice low, trying to keep steady.
She turned to him, still smiling. âDonât be afraid, Big Brother⦠Weâve finally caught its attention.â
Another roar.
This time, it wasnât just sound.
It was a call.
A will.
Something older than death. Older than stars. And it knew Vermondâs name.
The destroyer shook violentlyâalarms blaringâbut Kiana never broke her smile.
"This is fate, Vermond."
She stepped closer to him, resting her forehead to his.
"You're not just meant to command the dead... you're meant to command the abyss."
The destroyer groaned as it tilted in space, systems screaming, the very reality around it folding like fabric being drawn into the abyss.
Everyone gripped something.
Erie shouted. Jard was cursing. Ruen's knuckles turned white holding onto a rail.
But Vermond didnât hear them.
Kiana leaned forward.
Still calm. Still smiling.
She gently cupped Vermondâs face with both handsâand pressed her lips to his.
Soft. Long. Certain.
And thenâ
BOOM.
A shockwave burst from the command deck.
Not physical. Not necrotic. Not just divine.
It was something newâsomething between stars and death and obsession.
Kianaâs hair lifted like starlight in water. Her eyes blazed green-gold.
Vermondâs eyes glowed white, every number inside his soul momentarily flaring bright.
Outside, the space around them twisted, warpedâthe blackhole surged like it acknowledged them.
But it didnât pull the station in anymore.
Insteadâ
The massive structure slid, spun unnaturallyâand locked into a perfect, seamless orbit.
Jard fell into his chair. âWhat... the hell just happened?â
Erie was frozen, one hand still up in panic. âW-we were gonna die! Thatâs not how orbit physics works! WHAT THE HELL JUSTââ
Ruen was slack-jawed, pointing out the viewport.
The station was orbiting the blackhole.
Stably. Precisely.
As if the blackhole itself had adjusted its pull to fit them.
Inside the command deck, Kiana pulled back from Vermond, still smilingâeyes calm.
âSee?â she whispered sweetly. âYouâre mine now. And now this world⦠this blackhole⦠everything else⦠has to accept that.â
Vermond blinked. He wasnât sure if the heat in his chest was love or cosmic fire.
âThis⦠this is insane.â He whispered.
He spun on his heel, slammed his tablet onto the nearest panel, and began drawingâno, unleashingâa storm of blueprints. Holographic lines raced in every direction, overlapping, intersecting. Layer after layer of ideas and architecture flowed like lightning through his hands.
Erie blinked, just arrived back inside the destroyer. â...You okay there, genius?â
Jard didnât answer. He was too far gone.
âWeâll anchor here.â He pointed at a simulated asteroid belt forming around the singularity. âConvert mass into shielding nodes.â
âRadiation repurposed for power. Harnessed by graviton siphons.â Another point. Another flash. âTime dilation zonesâperfect for long-term experiments.â
Reading on Amazon or a pirate site? This novel is from Royal Road. Support the author by reading it there.
He spun to face them, eyes glowing with reflected light. âWeâre not just gonna live next to a blackhole. Weâre gonna build a throne around it!â
Ruen muttered, â...Broâs already naming castles in his head.â
Erie groaned, âHeâs in blueprint god mode again. Weâll be building floating toilets next.â
Jard ignored them. He was already summoning schematics for defensive arms, folded space corridors, and even a gravity well garden. âThis place is going to be the fortress. No one will reach us. Not the Folkan, not the cleansersânothing. Weâre going to be kings at the edge of reality.â
Then he paused⦠slowly turned to Vermond and Kiana, still close together near the viewport.
Jard narrowed his eyes. ââ¦Also, maybe donât kiss next time before letting me prep the sensors. I think my bones reversed for a second.â
Kiana just smiled. âWeâll kiss again when the fortress is finished.â
Vermond nodded, calmly. âBetter make it fast then.â
Jard spun back to work, shouting. âGET ME A COFFEE. AND BY COFFEE, I MEAN A CORE STABILIZER!â
Back at the station, alarms were still flickering weakly from the sudden gravitational shift earlier. Emergency protocols disengaged when the system confirmed: the station was now perfectly orbiting the blackhole, as if guided by the hands of a cosmic god.
In the Command Hall, Old Man Renn stood frozen in front of the massive viewport, arms trembling, a cup of tea halfway to his lipsânow cold.
âThey⦠they made the damn station orbit the blackholeâ¦â he muttered.
Behind him, crew scrambled to stabilize systems, but Renn didnât move.
Then suddenly, the hangar shook.
BOOOOM.
The undead destroyer returnedâquiet and majestic, like a leviathan docking with a space cathedral. Metal slid, locks sealed, and hissed steam announced the arrival of its twisted, glorious presence.
Renn turned as the hangar lights flickered.
Inside, Jard was still on board, hunched over a console with his arms flailing through layers of holograms, muttering equations and designs that made no sense to ordinary minds.
âGravimetric cannon housing on the southern pole⦠orbit-tethered shield nodes⦠must be facing the event horizon at all timesâ¦â
Renn squinted. âWhat in the name of hell is that kid doing nowâ¦â
Then he grunted, hit the intercom, and roared into the hallway:
âSOMEONE DRAG THAT DAMN ENGINEER OUT HERE BEFORE HE TURNS THE STATION INTO A TIME MACHINE!â
But inside the destroyerâ¦
Jard whispered with a grin. âOh no, old man⦠itâs already too late.â
He then tapped a panel, and a label appeared above his schematics:
PROJECT: GODâS EDGE
Stage 1 â The Citadel of the Maw
âVermond,â Jard said with the kind of excitement only a man who hasnât slept for 72 hours can produce, âWeâre going to build a Space Citadel. Iâm not talking armor plates and railgunsâI mean a full transformation. The station will become a living fortress, orbiting the most dangerous thing in the universe. A stronghold of the damned, but divine.â
Vermond leaned on the console, arms crossed. Kiana sat beside him, holding his sleeve like she always did now, silently watching the glowing lines of potential futures on the display.
âHow much?â Vermond asked flatly.
Jard chuckled, then coughed, then stopped laughing.
âA lot. Like⦠collapse-a-small-empire âa lot.â Weâll need materials, blueprints, and enough Credits to make the Federation itself weep.â
Vermond didnât blink.
âWeâll trade the Dark Crystal.â
Jard froze. ââ¦Youâre serious?â
Vermond turned, and that soft glow in his eyesâthose cursed, numbered eyesâshone.
âYes. I'm serious.â
Meanwhile, at the stationâs cafeteriaâ¦
Old man Renn slurped his soup like heâd already given up trying to understand this generation. Ruen was chewing on some sort of glowing fungus-pastry, while Erieâforehead resting on his palmâlooked like he was seconds away from throwing the table.
âTheyâre planning something big again,â Erie muttered.
âLet me guess,â Renn said with a grunt. âGiant sword on the station? Robotic limbs? Feeding the station the souls of the damned?â
âNo, worse,â Erie replied. âTheyâre building a castle around a blackhole and funding it with space devil rocks.â
Ruen blinked. âWhy do I feel like weâre background characters in some twisted love story and science experiment combinedâ¦â
Renn sipped from his mug, stared at them both, and sighed.
âBoys⦠this ainât science fiction anymore. Itâs just family issues with a budget.â
And then..
The merchant vessel DryUntilWet drifted just outside sensor reach of the citadel-to-be, its elegant hull shimmering with exotic shieldingâlayers of chemical resin and anti-radiation paint barely holding up in the strange energies near the blackhole. Inside, the infamous merchantâgrimy coat, long fingers always twitching with a love of profitâstared at the monitor in disbelief.
âNo wayâ¦â he muttered, leaning closer to the image feed.
A massive stationârebuilt, rebracedâcalmly floated in orbit of a living blackhole. No chains. No anchors. Just unnatural stability.
Suddenly, his comms blinked.
Vermondâs voice came throughâcalm, but cold.
âYou didnât see anything.â
The merchant gulped, sitting up straight.
âI mean, I saw a star. Very pretty star. Beautiful place. Totally unremarkable.â
âGood,â Vermond said. Then added, âYouâll keep it secret.â
âOf course!â the merchant replied quickly. âYou know Iâd never say a word. I wouldnât even tell my own reflection.â He paused. âBut I gotta admit⦠that station orbiting a blackhole? Thatâs legendary. Thatâs myth. Thatâsââ
âDo you want the Dark Crystal or not?â
That shut the merchant up. He smiled wide.
âI absolutely do. Bring it aboard. Youâve got yourself trade priority. But heyâbetween us? You ever want to sell tours, I know people whoâd pay just to see that placeâ¦â
âWeâre not making a theme park.â
âNo, no, of course not.â He winked at no one. âNot yet.â
The DryUntilWet crept closer, its engines whining as they adjusted to the gravitational fluxâuntil suddenly, the ship jolted.
Alarms blared inside. The merchant stumbled, caught his balance, and looked at the readings.
âWhat theâ?! Weâre being rejected! The gravityâs twisting like weâre a fly trying to land on a tigerâs nose!â
Inside the Command Center, Vermond narrowed his eyes, watching the vessel twitch and struggle on the edge of the orbital bubble.
Kiana, still beside him, leaned closeâcloser than usual.
Her lips barely brushed his ear as she whispered. "Just think⦠that the ship is allowed here. The blackhole listens to you, remember?â
Then she gently bit his earlobe and pulled back with a sly smile.
Vermond froze for a secondâheat creeping into his faceâthen closed his eyes.
He reached into that space of thought, where soul and command intertwined.
And he imagined the vessel was welcome.
That it belonged.
That it wouldnât be swallowed.
Outside⦠the blackholeâs furious pull shifted. A deep, resonating hum sounded in the void, like the satisfied growl of a sleeping god.
Suddenlyâ
The DryUntilWet stabilized.
The shipâs hull stopped trembling. The shields calmed. They floated like royalty on sacred waters.
Inside the merchantâs cockpit, his jaw dropped.
âWhat the hell just happenedâ¦? Did⦠did your station just let us in?â
Back on comms, Vermond simply said, âYouâre allowed now.â
The merchant blinked rapidly.
âYou guys are either cursed, blessed, or married to some eldritch goddessââ
He stopped mid-sentence, his eyes scanning the camera feed.
âWait⦠that girl beside you⦠she just winked at me?â
Vermond didnât answer. Kiana smiled coldly behind him, resting her hand on Vermondâs shoulder.
Then the merchant composed himself.
âAnyway, here's my surprise offer⦠and it's not cheap. Iâve got access to a Phantom Forge Core. Limited stock. It lets you phase part of your station outside normal space.â
He smirked.
âInvisibility. Untouchable. But dangerous. It eats normal tech unless stabilized by something⦠dark.â
He paused.
âI figured you might have something⦠dark.â
Vermondâs expression remained unreadable.
Kiana, however, looked thrilled.
âHe has enough,â she said quietly. âAnd more.â
The DryUntilWet had barely stabilized before the data feed lit up with requestsâa cascade of orders, each more ridiculous than the last.
The merchant squinted at his terminal as the requests streamed in:
180 industrial-grade forcefield generators
64 fusion-grade reactor nodes
29 gravitic anchors
12 atmospheric zone stabilizers
A dozen automated shipyards
Hundreds of kilometers of refined armor plating
And a request for âten thousand units of aesthetic alloy, Citadel-blackâ
âWhoa, whoa, whoaâwhat are you building over there, a new empire?â the merchant muttered, eyes wide as the numbers climbed.
In the Command Center, Jard leaned back in his seat beside Vermond, pulling up more diagrams. His hair was frazzled, his hands covered in grease, and his excitement was manic.
âOkay, so listenâthis part? Weâll need twin spires laced with plasma weaves. We mount the quantum relay behind the blackhole-facing side, and boom! Broadcast through spacetime. Also, I need an entire ring of anti-collapse relays. Oh, and thermal isolation domes.â
âHow many?â Vermond asked, deadpan.
Jard grinned. âAll of them.â
Kiana giggled softly beside Vermond. âBig brother loves shopping.â
The merchant's voice broke through the comms again.
âOkayâI'm sorryâbut I have to ask: how in the name of galactic sanity are you guys pulling this off? Iâve supplied stations, dreadnoughts, even royal courtsâbut this?â
Vermond leaned in toward the screen, his tone quiet but heavy with command.
âYouâll deliver. You donât ask questions.â
There was silence.
Then a nervous laugh.
âOkay, okayâsureâjust saying. Just curious.â
Kiana stepped into view. Her green eyes glowed faintly.
âToo curious,â she whispered.
The merchant froze.
â...Understood.â
She smiled sweetly.
âYouâre lucky. Big brother said youâre allowed.â
Behind them, Jard was still scribbling. âWe need towers, yesâmassive towersâand an inner sanctum chamber with soul insulation⦠a garden maybe? Nah, make it a death garden. And an orbital chandelier!â
The merchant stared at the order sheet.
â...I need a vacation.â
But he accepted the orders anyway.
Vermond folded his arms, eyes narrowed at the merchantâs screen. The list of materials already scrolled endlessly behind him, and now Jard had added âliving workforceâ to the construction blueprint. Kiana leaned lazily on his shoulder, arms looped around his arm as if refusing to be apart even during war meetings.
âWe need bodies,â Jard said bluntly, tapping on the holo. âOne hundred thousand workers. If we want the Citadel operational in a month, we need hands, engineers, technicians, miners, weldersâbreathers.â
The merchant looked uneasy but nodded.
âThereâs one place.â
A planet flickered onto the screen. Dark. Densely populated. Rotting.
âThis is Fulll-3,â the merchant said. âNot under any empire control anymore. Billions live there. The poor, the forgotten. The lawless. Crime syndicates run the cities. No hope, no food, no medicineânothing.â
Ruen entered with a tray of cafeteria snacks and squinted at the screen.
âLooks cheerful.â
Erie followed behind, chewing something unidentifiable. âSo weâre gonna offer them jobs, right? Or... scare them into it?â
Vermond said nothing for a moment, calculating.
Kiana suddenly sat upright and spoke softly.
âThey need a purpose. Let them work for something. Let them build a future. Let them build our Citadel.â
The merchant raised an eyebrow.
âYouâre really going to give those people a chance?â
Vermond finally answered, his voice cold but calm.
âWeâll give them food. Pay. A place to live. If they work... they rise.â
Jard chuckled, eyes gleaming. âWeâll filter the skilled from the desperate. Give the best ones purpose. And the rest... well, labor is still labor.â
Kiana smiled. âAnd maybe,â she added gently, âjust maybe, theyâll see my Big Brother as their salvation.â
Erie leaned to Ruen and whispered. âIs it me, or is this starting to sound like the beginning of a cult?â
âShut up, Iâm signing up,â Ruen replied, fake crying while eating.
Vermond stared at the projection of Fulll-3 again.
âTell them,â he said to the merchant, âThe Citadel is rising. If they want to live, build it.â
"Now, watch your payment," Vermond said, Coldly.
The merchant's jaw nearly hit the floor as the vault doors hissed open.
Dark crystals. Piled. Stacked. Gleaming with raw, eerie energy. Each one pulsing with power no sane merchant would ever turn down.
âBy the starsâ¦â he whispered, taking a step forward, his voice shaking. âThis could fund a warfleet. Or ten.â
Vermond walked beside him, quiet, calm.
âYou want payment. This is your payment. I want a million workers delivered from Fulll-3. On time. Quietly.â
âA m-million?â Jardâs voice cracked behind them as he leaned into the vault entrance, eyes wide. âVermond, I said we needed a hundred thousandânot a million!â
âAnd I said,â Vermond turned slightly, âwe build something greater than planned. We won't just build a Citadel. Weâll build a new system of power.â
Kiana was clinging to his arm as usual, grinning as if everything was unfolding just as she hoped.
âA kingdom...â she whispered.
The merchant blinked hard, trying not to drool. âThis⦠this will cover the cost. Iâll send every ship I have. Iâll even rent ones I donât own. But thisâthis stays between us.â
âGood,â Vermond replied.
Erie elbowed Ruen. âMillion workers, huh?â
Ruen sighed, dragging his hand across his face. âThatâs a lot of toilets to install.â
Jard stepped forward, muttering. âWeâll need housing expansion. More resource lines. AI labor directors. Food logistics. Blackhole shielding systems for the new quarters...â
âYouâll manage,â Vermond said. âWeâve got the crystals. Weâve got the destroyer. Weâve got a blackhole.â
Kiana rested her head on Vermondâs shoulder, smiling like a queen beside her king. âWeâve got everything.â
13 hours later..
The alert rang across the stationâ
âMassive jump signature detectedâmultiple vessels incoming!â
The black void of space near the Citadel shimmered, then tore open as dozens, then hundreds of ships emerged. Old freighters, clunky cargo haulers, stripped-down transportsâall crammed with people.
Erieâs eyes widened as he watched the chaos unfold from the window. âDamn. Thatâs a crowd.â
Inside the Command Center, Vermond stood with his arms folded, Kiana latched onto his arm as usual, humming softly.
The comms crackled alive. âTold you,â said the merchant, smug. âTransporting a million ainât quick. Iâve got the first batch of eighty thousand. Youâll get more every twelve hours. Hope your docking stations can handle it.â
Jard rushed in with a holopad, staring at the incoming ships. âWeâre gonna need to double the landing capacity. Triple, even! What are we going to feed them withâair?!â
Kiana tilted her head, smirking. âThey can eat their hopes and dreams until we stabilize supply chains.â
Erie choked back a laugh. Ruen just rubbed his forehead.
Suddenly, a voice burst across the commsâloud, angry, familiar.
âOH, SO YOU'RE ALL JUST GONNA BUILD AN EMPIRE AND LEAVE ME OUT OF IT AGAIN?!â
It was Renn.
Vermond sighed. âHeâs awake.â
âDamn right I am!â Renn growled. âIâm still stuck in this damn station watching reruns of Space Gardens! You need manpower, Iâm manpower! Let me do something before I rot to death, dammit!â
Erie, leaning into the mic: âYou already rotted. That beardâs older than the Federation.â
âIâm serious!â Renn barked. âPut me in charge of logistics or somethingâI ainât dying a spectator!â
Vermond nodded slowly, thoughtful. âFine. Youâll manage worker sorting, dorm assignments, and food lines.â
Renn paused. ââ¦Wait. Youâre giving me real work?â
âCongratulations,â Erie muttered. âYouâre head of peasants and potatoes.â
âIâll take it!â Renn shouted proudly. âFinally!â
As the first transport ships began docking, people poured outâskinny, tired, but eyes glowing with hope. They looked up at the looming Citadel-in-progress, suspended above the hungry blackhole, and didnât run.
They stayed.
They were ready.
Jard sighed, watching it all unfold with awe and dread. âWeâre really doing this, huh?â
The arrival turned into near-chaos within minutes.
The docking bays boomed one after another, hissing open to flood with peopleâshouting, stumbling, eyes wide in awe or confusion. Crates fell, someone was already trying to sell fried meat sticks, a child climbed a ventilation pipe like it was a jungle gym. The first batch of 80,000 wasnât going to wait for anyoneâs order.
Then⦠silence fell over Docking Bay 1.
Six elite undead stepped forwardâtall, terrifying, and fully geared. Their faces were blank white masks, expressions unreadable, but their sheer presence made the atmosphere drop in temperature.
One of them raised a hand and pointed to the mob.
Without a word, the entire group fell into stunned silence. One person even dropped their drink.
The same pattern repeated across the other bays. The elite undead didnât speak. They didnât need to. Order returned like someone had hit a reset button.
Inside the Command Room, Vermond watched the feeds with arms folded.
âDeploy more undead for guidance patrols,â he muttered.
Kiana sat on his lap again, her fingers running lazily through his hair. âYour soldiers are so polite,â she said sweetly.
Jard was sprinting from console to console behind them. âWe need more sleeping quartersâNOW! And air scrubbers! And oh Void, the sewage systemâs going to die in twelve hoursââ
Vermond calmly opened comms.
âMerchant. Iâm buying one of your older battleships. Weâll convert it into overflow housing.â
The merchantâs voice buzzed back, amused.
âAny preferences? Itâs an old Bledde Mark IVâarmored, but no weapons. You want to load it up?â
Vermond replied smoothly:
âJust one medium explosive cannon. Two anti-missile pods. Nothing more. Itâs not meant to fight.â
The merchant chuckled.
âWell, youâre the first warlord Iâve met who orders minimum weapons.â
âEfficiency,â Vermond replied.
The battleshipâscuffed, grey, and massiveâwas towed into orbit near the station. The workers, now under Rennâs grumbling guidance, began shuffling toward it in organized lines.
Ruen stared from one of the hallways, munching a protein stick.
âThey really turned this mess into a working plan.â
Erie leaned next to him, arms crossed.
âVermond, Kiana, Jardâtheyâre building something big. Like real big. Maybe too big.â
Ruen shrugged. âBig enough to change everything.â
Meanwhile, in Docking Bay 12, one kid whispered to another as the elite undead marched by.
âAre we safe here?â
The other kid looked at the Soon-to-be-Citadel casting its shadow over the blackhole and whispered,
âIf weâre not⦠no one is.â
The old Bledde Mark IV, now renamed The Temp Dweller, groaned under its own age as the docking clamps latched it into place beside the station. Ancient paint peeled from its flanks, revealing layers of forgotten battles, scars of time. But today, it wasnât a warshipâit was a floating city block.
Jard, Erie, and Ruen were already aboard, walking down the creaking metal halls with datapads in hand.
âWeâll divide it into four sections,â Jard muttered, sketching quickly on his tablet. âLiving quarters, mess halls, sanitation, and a general leisure deck. Minimal luxuries. Just keep 'em sane.â
Erie kicked a rusted pipe. âThis thing smells like a corpse.â
âGood,â Jard replied. âThen it fits the theme.â
In the mess hall, several hundred of the newly arrived workers had already started unpacking. Crates turned into chairs, bags into beds. The elite undead stood silently in corners like guardians, their white eyes glowing faintly.
âWeâll need food processors, bunk layers, and clean water,â Ruen said, marking another section. âAnd maybe someone to sing lullabies.â
Erie smirked. âYou volunteering?â
Meanwhile, up at the command center of the Temp Dweller, Vermond and Kiana arrived. She still held onto his arm tightly, her green eyes glowing faintlyânever straying from his presence.
The crowd quieted as Vermond entered. One of the new arrivals stepped forward, older man, face weathered by poverty.
âYou⦠you're the one who brought us here?â
Vermond nodded. âYou want work, youâll get it. You want safety, follow orders. You want a futureâhelp me build it.â
The man dropped to a knee. The others followed.
Kiana smiled proudly beside him.
âTheyâre not afraid,â she whispered.
âThey donât need to be,â Vermond replied. âWeâre not Pirates.â
Back in the maintenance bay, Jard clapped his hands. âRight then! This place is now sleeping quarters for twenty thousand people! Whoâs ready to install air filters with me?â
Ruen muttered, âWe were engineers, now weâre janitors.â
Erie slapped a crate open. âWeâre builders now.â
Back in the Command Center.
Kiana lay curled on the couch, her head resting in Vermondâs lap, white hair spilling like moonlight. Her breathing was soft and steady, lips slightly parted, a peaceful look softening her usually intense features. Vermond sat still, one hand gently moving, brushing a strand of her hair aside and caressing the tips of her pointed earsâsoft, warm, and trembling faintly to his touch.
He stared at her, whispering low, as if afraid to wake her⦠but needing to speak.
âWhy do you keep calling me your big brotherâ¦?â His voice was quiet, distant. âKiana..â
His fingers paused at the tip of her ear, then moved again. Slowly, rhythmically.
âWhy are you so close to me? Why do you cling to me like Iâm the only thing left in the universe?â
She didnât stir.
âWhy do you love me so much?â His voice cracked, barely audible.
The silence stretched, broken only by the low hum and Kianaâs breath.
âYouâre obsessed with me, Kiana⦠Why? Why me?â
He leaned back slightly, still stroking her hair. His eyes softened. âAnd why are you so beautifulâ¦?â he whispered. âLike something not even this galaxy couldâve created⦠something divine...â
Kiana stirred faintly but didnât wake. Her lips formed a soft smile in her sleep as if she somehow heard him in her dream.
Vermond exhaled through his nose. He looked out the window. The void looked back.
Inside one of the temporary build offices, Jard hunched over a comm console, greasy hands flipping through blueprint holograms as he tapped furiously at the controls.
âCâmon⦠whereâs that damn merchantâ¦â Jard grumbled, cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth.
The holo flickered.
DryUntilWet appeared, raising an eyebrow and smirking. âBack so soon, Jard? Didnât Vermond say no more spending?â
Jard leaned in, lowering his voice.
âYeah yeah, but this isnât Vermond. This is me. I need five more construction ships. The heavy kind. I got a vision, you hear me? A vision of a blackhole-bound Citadel so good itâll put every station in the quadrant to shame.â
âA vision, huh?â the merchant drawled. âWhatâs it paying with? Dreams?â
Jard grinned. âNah⦠better. I got credits.â
He pulled out three ID cards and waved them toward the cam.
âThese belong to Erie, Ruen, and old man Renn. Don't tell them.â
The merchant blinked.
ââ¦You stole from your crew?â
âI borrowed, with style,â Jard said, puffing proudly. âTheyâll get a great view when this thingâs done.â
The merchant snorted.
âYouâre lucky I like chaos. Deal.â
Jard sat back in his chair with a devilish grin as the transaction processed. On the console, five massive construction ships blinked into the order queue, already preparing for the jump.
Behind him, the office door suddenly creaked open.
Ruen poked his head in, suspicious.
âHey. You seen my credit chip?â
Jard casually turned around, arms behind his back.
âCredit chip? Nah. You probably dropped it. Clumsy hands and all.â
Erieâs voice chimed in from the hallway.
âHey! Me too!â
And then Renn yelled from somewhere down the corridor,
âWHAT DO YOU MEAN MY ACCOUNT IS EMPTY?!â
Jard slowly closed the door and locked it.
âTheyâll thank me later,â he muttered, eyes glinting with mad inspiration as blueprints scrolled wildly before him.
âThe Citadel must rise.â
Minutes later..
Jardâs eyes widened.
âNo, no no no noââ
He was already sprinting through the steel corridors of the station, nearly slipping around a corner as he headed straight to the Command Center. The door slid openâ
And there, in the dim, soft-blue ambient glow of the starless void, Vermond and Kiana were lying on the main couch like two curled children. Kianaâs arms were lazily wrapped around Vermondâs torso, and her cheek was pressed against his chest. Both were breathing calmly, peacefully. Vermondâs arm unconsciously rested around her, his fingers tangled in her silver hair.
Jard blinked. â...Are you guys serious right now?â
No response.
He stormed up, shaking Vermond by the shoulder.
âVermond. The ships. Theyâre getting pulled. Blackhole. Death. Screaming. Your projectâs about to get erased!â
Vermondâs eyes openedâcalm, glowing faintly. He didnât even sit up.
He simply raised one hand, eyes still half-lidded with drowsiness.
Outside, the construction vesselsâseconds away from being crushed by gravitational tidesâsuddenly stopped. Not violently, but smoothly, as if invisible hands cradled them in place. Then⦠the gravitational pull relaxed. The blackhole, impossibly, seemed to shift its hunger away.
The five vessels began to glide toward the station like they had always belonged there.
Jard stared. â...What the hell did you do?â
Vermond closed his eyes again, Kiana mumbling happily in her sleep, still hugging him tightly.
He didnât respond.
âYou didnât even lookâ¦â Jard whispered. Then louder, âYou didnât even LOOK, you bastard!â
Vermond muttered softly, still half-asleep.
âBlackhole knows her scent⦠she said it was allowed.â
Jard froze.
âSheâ? ...Kiana?â
As if on cue, Kiana stirred, nuzzling closer to Vermond. âMmm⦠told you, my big brotherâs special⦠shhhâ¦â She said, sweetly.
Jard slowly backed out of the room, slapping his forehead. âI donât get paid enough for this weird, romantic, cosmic dramaâ¦â
But he paused outside the door, a grin breaking across his face as he looked at the feed:
All five construction ships now safely docked, prepping their arms and materials.
âHell yeah,â he muttered. âTime to build a goddamn fortress around a blackhole.â
Jard was just about to step out of the Command Center when Vermondâs voiceâcalm and oddly commanding despite its softnessâcalled out.
âJard. Wait.â
Jard turned mid-step, raising an eyebrow. Kiana had half-sat up on the couch now, still curled against Vermondâs side with that usual, eerie smile. Her white hair glowed faintly in the dimmed lights.
âWhat now?â Jard asked.
Vermond, now fully awake and sitting up, reached forward and tapped into the comms. âMerchant. You there?â
The familiar static-crackled voice of the DryUntilWetâs captain buzzed in almost instantly.
âI never left, Future Leader of an Empire. You enjoying your... rest?â
Kiana chuckled beside Vermond, burying her face against him. Jard sighed.
Vermondâs tone was sharp now, focused.
âFive construction vessels wonât be enough. Not for a million workers.â
He stood slowly, letting Kiana lean against his side as he paced toward the central screen.
âI want you to deliver: 133 small construction crafts, 92 medium construction vessels, 43 large construction vessels. And I want a hundred thousand old construction suits with basic tools for manual deployment.â
The other end of the comms went silent.
For a moment, only the quiet hum of the station and Kianaâs content humming was heard.
Thenâ
âPffftâAHAHA! Youâre not building a Citadel, youâre trying to build a galactic monument!â the Merchant said with amusement.
âYou do realize your dark crystal stash might not survive that list, right?â
Vermond didnât even blink.
âItâs okay.â
Kiana beamed.
Jard froze, then did a double-take.
âWait, what?! Youâre actually gonna trade all that? Youâre actuallyâby the starsâokay with it!?â
Vermond looked over his shoulder, one hand resting on the console, the other still holding Kiana close.
âIâm building a fortress by a blackhole, Jard. I donât care about richesâI care about this. Letâs make it real.â
Jardâs face cracked into a wide, utterly joyful grin.
He slammed a fist into his palm.
âOh hell yeah! You glorious, sleep-deprived son of a geniusâWEâRE GONNA BUILD A CITY OF GODS!â
From the comms, the Merchant was laughing again.
âAlright then, consider it done! Iâll start deploying the haulers. This... this is going to be the biggest trade in my life.â
Kiana looked up at Vermond, whispering,
âBig brother always makes big decisions... thatâs why I love you.â
Jard was already sprinting toward the docking bays.
He was going to personally welcome every single delivery.
Cut to the Cafeteria of Controlled Mayhem, where Erie and Ruen sat at their usual tableânow slightly shoved aside thanks to the recent layout shuffle for "mass personnel intake."
Erie poked at the gray ration cubes on his tray with the handle of a wrench, grimacing.
"We're getting a million workers," Erie muttered, half to himself.
"That's one million people with one million chances of me not dying alone."
Ruen raised an eyebrow, his fork frozen mid-air. "Youâre saying you want to date one of the construction workers?"
Erie narrowed his eyes. "Iâm sayingâstatisticallyâat least one of them has to be into emotionally unavailable, scarred-up muscle freaks who bench press their trauma."
Ruen leaned back, arms crossed.
"You sure about that? Because last time, your 'statistical hope' ended with you being catfished by a cleaning drone."
"It beeped affectionately, Ruen!"
Before Ruen could reply, the door hissed open.
A few of the first arrivalsâscruffy, ragged workers from the merchantâs transportâstepped in, wide-eyed and stunned by the interior of the undead-built station.
One woman looked around and whispered, âIs this the cafeteria?â
Erie instantly stood up.
"WELCOME TO YOUR NEW LIFE!"
He smoothed back his messy hair and slapped his bicep.
"The nameâs Erie. If you need help adjusting, I'm available. Emotionally and physically.â
Ruen groaned and covered his face.
"Stars, here we go..."
The woman stared for a second, then leaned to her friend and whispered, âIs that guy trying to flex and flirt at the same time?â
"I think so."
Another worker stepped inâthis time a towering guy with a sledgehammer slung over his shoulder. He looked right at Ruen and gave a sharp nod.
"You one of the planners?"
Ruen blinked. "Uh⦠yeah?"
"Cool. Got any coffee?"
Erie pointed toward the dispenser. "Behind him. Black as the void and tastes like depression."
The guy grunted in approval and moved past.
Erie slumped back down beside Ruen, grumbling. "Why does he get attention and I get weird stares?"
Ruen sipped his drink.
"Because you keep saying things like âIâm available emotionally and physicallyâ like itâs a pickup line and not a medical warning.â
Erie threw a napkin at him.
"This is war, Ruen. Romance war. And Iâm not losing to a blackhole, a Citadel, or that weird whispering sister."
Ruen chuckled, patting his friendâs shoulder. "Youâll get your weird romance arc eventually, buddy."
22 Hours later..
A thousand docking alarms. Screeching hydraulics. The scent of recycled air laced with fried synth-onions and desperation.
Old Man Renn stood in the middle of the chaos, eyes twitching, two data tablets in each hand, four screens open in mid-air, and zero patience left.
"WHERE IS SECTION F?! THAT IS NOT SECTION F! THAT IS A TOILET!" he yelled, red-faced, as a group of bewildered workers wandered through a hallway marked Airlock Maintenance.
"Why are you holding a mattress?!"
The worker paused. "Someone said this was where we sleep."
"On an airlock maintenance panel?!"
Suddenly, boom. Erie crashed into the scene like a cannonball.
"Old man!" Erie shouted over the noise. "You're gonna have an aneurysm!"
"I AM the aneurysm!" Renn barked.
Ruen followed behind, calm as always (Just an actâNot really calm in the inside), sipping the worst cafeteria coffee in existence.
"We brought clipboards. And sarcasm. Letâs organize this madness."
With grunts, hand signals, and surprising efficiency, Erie started directing the crowd like a drill sergeant with charm.
Ruen sorted files like a bored god of logistics.
The Elite Undeads, stood motionless at key corridorsâsilent, unsettling, and undeniably effective.
Order was slowly forming.
Meanwhile...
Inside the Command Chamber, above the madness, Vermond stared at the blackhole through the large viewport.
Kiana leaned beside him, sitting on the armrest of his command chair like she owned it.
Jard was pacing, working on a projectionâdesigns swirling around him like sparks of genius.
But Vermond⦠had a plan.
"We'll give them something to believe in," he said slowly.
"A symbol. A story. The fallen empire... rebuilt."
He turned to Kiana, his expression serious.
"Kiana... your image. The citizens need hope. Youâll be the face of it. The princess who lost everything. Rebuilding beside her 'brother.'"
Kiana blinked slowly.
Then smiled. Slowly.
"A kingdom with my Big Brother as its King... and me, his devoted Queen?"
Vermond coughed. "Iâwellâitâs just a metaphor, you donât have to go that farâ"
But Kiana had already leaned into the live comms feed, which was accidentally still open.
She kissed Vermondâs lips.
A soft smack echoed into every corner of the Citadel.
The docking bay froze. Cafeteria workers gasped. Even the Elite Undead tilted their heads in sync.
Ruen, holding two clipboards. "What the hell was that?"
Erie, staring at a screen. "I think the Commander-son-of-a-void just got kissed into a religion."
Back in the command center, Vermond stared at her, stunned.
"Kiana⦠that wasnât in the plan."
Kiana turned toward the screen, eyes half-lidded and voice velvet-smooth.
"No one⦠touches my Big Brother."
The silence across the comms was deafening.
Even Jard paused, blinking at his blueprint.
Erie and Ruen both leaned back from their stations, wide-eyed.
"Did she justâ"
"Yup."
"Andâ"
"Yup."
Old man Rennâs voice crackled in.
"I leave you alone for hours and now weâre building an empire with a romance subplot?!"
25 Hours later..
The construction continued in waves, sparks flying across scaffolding as the workers from the poor planet built foundations with passion and desperation. Steel and stone fused, halls expanded, and drones hummed like a colony of bees.
The Citadel was growing.
Inside the control tower of the station, Vermond stood with his hands behind his back, the blackhole swirling like an eye of the void beyond the glass. Kiana was beside him, of courseâleaning slightly against his shoulder, eyes half-lidded but sharp.
Thenâa chime.
Merchant DryUntilWetâs voice came through the comms, crackling with static.
"⦠We have a problem. One of my major vessels, loaded with resources, is being chased. Three hostile destroyers. Theyâre closeâwithin a few jumps of your sector."
Vermond didnât even flinch. He slowly smiled.
"Then bring them here."
The comm went silent for a moment.
"No defense?" the merchant asked carefully.
"No guns pointed at them?"
"Just bring them."
"...Understood."
He didnât question it. Not anymore. Not after seeing the blackhole bend to Vermond's will.
Moments passed. The bridge lights dimmed. Tactical readouts flared red.
âThree warp signatures inbound.â
Everyone inside the station tensed.
Then:
Three sleek, black pirate destroyers dropped out of warp, their hulls gleaming with plasma plating, weapons hot.
For a second, it looked like they might fire.
But then⦠the blackhole pulsed.
A soundâdeep, otherworldly, like the growl of a celestial beastâechoed through space.
The destroyers began to shift, violently pulled off-course. Their captains fought itâbarrier flares, reverse thrusts, panic.
Didnât matter.
One by one, the pirate destroyers screamed as they were dragged into the blackhole, hulls bending like metal paper, crushed into nothing.
Gone.
Silence.
Then: a slow clapping from behind.
Ruen, stepping onto the bridge with a smirk.
"I donât care what anyone says, thatâs the coolest home defense system Iâve ever seen."
Erie followed behind, grinning.
"Who needs turrets when that blackhole itself is in love with you?"
Vermond didnât answer.
Kiana smiled wide beside him, gaze fixed on the empty void where the destroyers once were.
She leaned closer to Vermond and whispered. âGood job, Big brother.â
He didnât correct her.
The blackhole was quiet now. Its cosmic hunger temporarily calmed, as if content with the offerings it had devoured. The space around the Citadel shimmered faintlyâprotected, tamed, or simply obeying the one who stood at its heart.
Then they arrived.
Hundreds of ships.
Construction vessels. Cargo haulers. Shuttles brimming with old space suits, tools, and industrial modules. The merchant's fleet glided in with practiced grace, each marked with the sigil of DryUntilWetâs trade empire.
Through the windows of the Command Center, the sky lit up like a second sunâone made of steel and ambition.
âTheyâre hereâ¦â Jard whispered, his voice trembling not with fearâbut excitement.
Then he shouted.
"All construction teams! Form up! Everyone to their stations! We have a city to build!"
The comms lit up with chatter. From the station to the battleship. From temporary docks to floating platforms. The sound of a million hands beginning to move.
âThis monthâno, no delays!â Jard barked, standing atop a container crate near the central control zone. âWe donât build this slow. We finish this Citadel now!â
He slammed his fist on a holo-terminal, activating blueprint overlays across multiple screens.
Massive pillars. Energy-core towers. Defensive rings. Civilian hubs. Massive docking yards.
Every part of the Citadel had a place. And Jard commanded it all.
Inside the station, Vermond stood, watching everything like a maestro watching his orchestra tune. Kiana, as always, sat on the armrest beside him, one leg crossed over the other, her eyes half-lidded with pleasure.
"Heâs really into it," Vermond muttered, watching Jard scream orders at three people simultaneously.
"Heâs having the time of his life," Kiana giggled, brushing her fingers through Vermondâs hair. âLet him. You already claimed the blackhole. Let him build your throne.â
Vermond said nothing⦠but his eyes gleamed faintly, reflecting the stars and the swirling gravity well behind it all.
In the background, Ruen and Erie stood near the hangar gates, watching the construction madness begin.
âSo this is it,â Ruen muttered. âA kingdom of steel. Born from a hole in space.â
Erie smirked. âBuilt by undead, pirates, orphans, mad scientists⦠and led by a guy with glowing eyes and a clingy space sister. Honestly? Iâm into it.â
They both laughed.
Jard stood on a floating scaffold, gripping a comm.
"No delays! We finish Sector A before the day ends! And someone stop putting food crates in the reactor tunnel!"
On the lower docking platforms, Erie chewed on an old protein bar, watching the growing metal behemoth with wide eyes.
âThis is super fast,â he muttered, nudging Ruen with his elbow. âWeâre gonna fully build the Citadel within a month, really. At this pace, theyâll have a space opera filmed here by next week.â
Ruen replied with a grunt, still balancing a crate on one shoulder.
âIf you say the word opera again, I swear Iâll throw you into the waste shaft.â
26 hours later..
The first defensive railposts came online. Turrets on auto-crawl legs stood atop partially built towers, scanning the abyss around the blackhole.
Old man Renn, finally placed in charge of local civilian organization, was running around with a data tablet and a migraine.
âThese people donât listen! They think setting up a black market on Deck 3 is normal!â
Erie passed by, whistling. âIt kinda is, boss.â
Renn turned around and threw the tablet. Erie dodged it with a grin.
âDonât worry! Youâll get used to being completely ignored!â
24 hours later...
Food distribution modules installed.
A million hungry workers began getting proper meals. Soup dispensers, ration printers, nutrient barsâsomehow, Vermond had made room for it all.
The merchantâs haulers kept coming and going, ferrying supplies nonstop. In the vault, the dark crystals were disappearing fastâbut Vermond never batted an eye.
Kiana, however, spent her day wandering the catwalks, watching the build.
Clinging close to Vermond wherever he walked.
âTheyâre building your empire, big brother,â she whispered once, her green eyes gleaming. âThey just donât realize it yet.â
67 hours later..
Construction drones multiplied.
Decks became halls. Halls became cities.
Housing pods were lifted and docked to the outer ring. Communication towers started lighting up, reaching distant frequencies. Massive shield generators were mounted to lock orbit with the blackholeâs edge.
Erie and Ruen got assigned to supervise Docking Hub Beta.
âWeâve got forty-nine elevator shafts being built vertically through space, and some idiot stuck a bathroom at the center.â
Erie facepalmed. âTell Jard we need plumbers that understand gravity.â
22 hours later...
Jard stood before the workers, voice amplified through comms.
âPhase One is complete. Youâve done the impossible. But now⦠we start layering the Citadelâs soul!â
Cheers erupted. Lights blinked across the hull. The Citadel was no longer just a dreamâit was beginning to breathe.
12 hours later..
The comms buzzed across the command center, cutting through the ambient noise of welding and construction. Vermond stood calmly, Kiana resting against him, her eyes half-lidded and curious.
Merchant, through the comms. âVermond. I have news⦠a lot of peopleâmillions, in factâwant to join your empire.â
Vermond tilted his head slightly, voice cool.
âHow many?â
The merchantâs holo-projection flickered, his smile widening like a dealer laying down a winning hand.
âThirty-six million souls.â
At that moment, a scream echoed through the Citadel's internal comms.
Jard, yelling through the channel. âTHIRTY-SIX MILLION!? ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR MIND?!â
Somewhere on Deck 5, Erie nearly dropped his datapad, looking toward Ruen.
Ruen just blinked slowly and muttered.
âHeâs gonna do it.â
Back in the Command Center, Vermond stood silent for a moment, fingers stroking Kianaâs hair as she giggled softly, curling into him.
âThatâs a lot of people,â he finally said. âSo⦠how much?â
The merchant leaned closer, his image distorting slightly.
âOne giant dark crystal in your vault. Thatâs all I want.â
Kianaâs eyes gleamed with mischief. She whispered something into Vermondâs ear.
A smirk tugged at his lips.
âAgreed,â Vermond said.
âAnd make sure they come with old space construction suits and proper tools.â
The merchant grinned devilishly.
âYou got it.â
Jardâs voice didnât return for a moment. Thenâ¦
Jard, through comms, eerily calm.
ââ¦Weâre going to build the greatest city the galaxy has ever seen. The Citadel of the Blackhole. Bring them all. Iâll carve paradise from the void itself.â
Erie and Ruen stared at each other, then at the comms speaker. Renn, who had just taken a bite of soup, slowly lowered his spoon.
ââ¦Heâs smiling like a maniac, isnât he?â
âYou know it.â Erie muttered.
The void then trembled.
A tremor rippled across the sensors of the undead destroyer, the station, and the Citadel's blooming construction towers.
ââ¦What the hell is that?â Renn asked.
ThenâBOOM. A hundred thousand warp signatures flared across the system.
Old, rusted, smoking, groaning vessels of every kind poured in like a tsunami of broken dreams. Faint echoes of horns, blinking red lights, malfunctioning landing thrustersâan entire armada of desperation.
Cargo haulers barely holding their seams. Civilian shuttles stacked with crates, scrap, and humans peeking from windows. Some were flying sideways. Some literally had parts tied down with rope.
And all of them were headed straight toward the Citadel.
The Citadel's orbiting space lit up like a city skyline.
Jard, standing in command, mouth open.
ââ¦HOLY SPACE.â
Erie, blinking hard. ââ¦That's a lot of rust.â
âAnd misery. Donât forget the misery.â Ruen added.
Vermond stood with arms folded on the Citadelâs upper deck, Kiana beside himâone arm lovingly wrapped around his waist, her head leaning on his shoulder.
He slowly turned his head to the holo-call already blinking.
âMerchant,â he said calmly, âhow⦠in this endless void⦠did you get that many ships? Even if theyâre old?â
The merchantâs projection appeared, casual as always, sipping something suspiciously colorful.
Merchant, grinning ear to ear, âSimple, my friend. I bought every single forgotten junker and derelict I could find across seventeen scrapyard systems.â
The merchant then raised his glass, toasting his own brilliance.
âThanks to your beautiful, powerful, and oh-so-valuable dark crystals.â
Kiana giggled beside Vermond. âThatâs why I said just give it. Heâs useful, right?â
Vermond smirked, shaking his head as the first wave of ships began attempting clumsy dockings.
Elite undead stood at each bay, guiding with glowing eyes and stiff, perfect coordination.
Some of the poor immigrants inside cried at the sight of safety. Others simply stared at the Citadelâs growing towers in disbelief.
Jard, yelling through the comms again.
âEVERYONE TO STATIONS! THIS IS GOING TO BE THE BIGGEST NIGHTMARE IâVE EVER LOVED!â
2 hours later..
It happened in the middle of another loud comm session.
Jard, eyes bloodshot, pacing across the command bridge like a lunatic, suddenly slammed his hand down on the console.
âNO. THISâthis isnât enough. This is childâs play. A Citadel? No, no, NO!â
âWEâRE GOING TO BUILD A SPACE CAPITAL! THE CAPITAL OF EMPIRES! THE HEART OF THE BLACKHOLE!â
Everyone turned silent. Even the elite undead paused mid-step.
Erie, blinking. ââ¦He snapped.â
Ruen, taking notes. âOr maybe⦠maybe he ascended.â
Vermond, sitting calmly with Kiana on his lapâagainâsimply tilted his head, mildly curious.
Kiana, grinning. âLet him dream big, Big brother. It suits him.â
Jardâs voice cracked across all channels.
âWeâll make it larger than a moon! A whole capitalâcitadel cities stacked on top of cities! Space elevators, central cores, deep vaults, eco-domes, planetary defense towers, a royal sector! This is IT! THIS ISâ!â
Beep.
Merchant on comms, chuckling.
â...You're mad, engineer. But I like mad. Now, listen: you want that much? You'll need everything. And I meanâeverything. Iâll prepare transport ships, resources, tech, suits, processors, metals, even workersâbutâyou pay me slowly. One contract, delivery guaranteed.â
Everyone turned to Vermond.
ââ¦No.â He said, coldly.
Silence.
âI donât like contracts. I like choices.â
He stood up, Kiana sliding off his lap like a cat, her eyes glowing.
He walked to the vault, and on the private visual line to the merchant, held out three glowing medium dark crystals, pure and pulsing.
âThis will be your payment.â
The merchant stared at the feed. For a moment, even he was breathless.
âThose⦠still breathe with death. You do realize thatâs worth more than that?â
Vermond, through the comms. âAnd still⦠I give them to you.â
The merchantâs grin widened.
âFine. Deal. You got it, space lord. Iâm transferring millions of tons worth of resources now. Ships are en route. I want front row seats when this monster of a Capital is done.â
25 hours later.
Thousands of ships began warping in. Mountains of steel. Beams longer than towers. Energy cores. Alien alloys. Terraforming kits. Plasma reactors. Artificial gravity cores.
Jard, screaming with joy, âYES! THIS IS IT! THIS IS ITTTT!â
Even the undead twitched with excitement.
And above it all, Vermond turned to the blackhole.
âLetâs carve an empire... where even gravity bows to us.â
The stars were no longer quiet.
The Space Capital Citadel, still under wild construction, was already being called by some as the "Black Throne."
Massive rings were forming around the blackholeâs orbit, powered by stabilized gravity cores.
Hundreds of city sectors were mapped, ships swarming like locusts building towers, domes, bays, sectors.
And then came the call. The merchant spoke.
âVermond. I have another offer.â
Jard, groaning in the background.
âAnother? Let me guessâhe wants the sun.â
âNot quite. I want⦠the heart.â
The command center fell quiet. The Merchant continued.
âI will send you resources for free. Endless transport, supplies, materials, even defense weapons. My best workers, top-tier logistics, my whole company. In returnâgive me the center of your capital citadel. Let me build the Grand Market thereâthe greatest in all known sectors. And at the very top of my market towerââ
He paused.
ââthatâs where you, Vermond, and your command seat will be built. Your throne, your peak, your legend.â
It was bold. It was insane.
Even Jardâs mouth opened.
ââ¦Did he just say heâll give us everything⦠for a market in the middle?â
Erie, snorting.
âSounds like a good deal. I mean⦠center-front shop and we get a free empire?â
Vermond sat quietly, arms crossed. But before he could speakâ
Kiana leaned over him, her white hair brushing his cheek.
Her hands cradled his face, lips pressing to his firmly. Then spoke, warmly.
âItâll be beneficial to us, Big Brother. With him⦠we wonât just rule. Weâll thrive.â
Her green eyes glowed with something fierce and strange.
Vermond stared at her for a moment, then turned to the comms.
âYou get the center. Build your market. And Iâll build my throne⦠on top of it.â
The Merchant burst out laughing with glee.
âYouâve made the wisest deal in the galaxy, Vermond. Long live the Black Throne.â
7 hours later..
The construction did not stop.
If anything, it roared.
The Merchantâs fleets arrived like a swarm of metallic angelsâcargo haulers, construction carriers, mobile food dispensers, and even med-station barges. Massive automated cranes deployed. Shields stabilized. Drones screamed overhead.
Merchant, through comms.
âTo all personnel. Food dispensers are online. Priority to sector 9 through 34. Work rotations adjusted. Additional construction ships en route.â
He paused, then.
âLong live the Black Throne.â
Jard stood at the highest point of the central under-construction spire, wind howling through the scaffolding. His coat flapped like a banner of madness.
Jard through loudspeaker.
âWE ARENâT BUILDING A CAPITALâWEâRE BUILDING HISTORY! MORE SHIPS! MORE TOOLS! IF YOUâRE BREATHINGâYOUâRE BUILDING!â
Erie and Ruen, now dubbed unofficial âSector Coordinators,â moved between people like streaks of lightning.
Ruen, laughing hard, âThis is madness.â
âNo. This is Vermondâs empire. And weâre the damn architects.â Erie answered.
The food lines moved smooth, the stations swarmed with people getting nutrient bars, hot synth-meals, and flavored liquids. There was even music playing at some dispensers now.
Old Man Renn at a food terminal, chewing hard. âLast time I saw this many people working this hard, a planet blew up.â
Meanwhile, Vermond and Kiana watched from the high observation deck, construction lights reflecting in their eyes. The massive market towerâs foundation had already begun, spiraling up, hundreds of lifts carrying goods nonstop.
Kiana, sitting beside Vermond, smiling, âLook, Big Brother⦠theyâre all moving like theyâve been waiting their whole lives for this.â
Vermond, quietly stroking Kiana's hair. âThey have.â
1 hour later..
âEVERYONEâLISTEN UP!â
Jardâs voice cracked through every comm, every screen, every speaker across the titanic construction zones.
From the lowest scaffolds to the outermost decksâall movement paused.
Civilians, engineers, undead elites, even food bots turned.
Jard stood on a reinforced platform with a wild grin, wind tugging at his hair, one massive blueprint glowing behind him in holographic grandeur.
âTHE CITADEL ISNâT BIG ENOUGH! WEâRE GOING TO EXPAND AGAIN! WEâRE NOT BUILDING A CITYâWEâRE BUILDING A LEGEND! INTRODUCINGâ¦â
The blueprints flared in full.
A structure so massive it blocked the stars in the simulationâa fortress-city so vast, it wrapped around the entire stable orbit.
âTHE SUPER CAPITAL CITADEL!â
Gasps echoed across every channel.
Erie, through private comms, chewing a snack. âThis guyâs insane.â
Ruen, holding a can of soda. â...I think I love it.â
Jard, continuing his physychotic plan.
âWe will add three orbital belts for shipyards, one for housing, and the top dome will hold a planetary-grade council hall!â
âIt will dwarf moons. It will be SEEN from parsecs away!â
Kiana, sipping tea beside Vermond in the command tower, whispered with a smile. âHeâs going feral.â
Vermond, calmly watching, one hand stroking her hair. âGood. Let him.â
Suddenly, the Merchantâs face popped on the comms, sipping from a goblet in his ship.
Merchant, deadpan. â...I take it youâll need more materials?â
Vermond, smirking. âTriple the last order. And throw in an orbital coffee garden.â
The merchant choked, then laughed. âItâs a deal. Long live the Super Capital Citadel.â
The merchantâs face flickered across the comms again, a calm voice speaking behind the smooth mask of a trade negotiator.
âAlso.. Vermond, another wave is coming. One hundred million.â
Silence.
Renn, grumbling, âYouâll burn all your dark crystals at this rate, boy.â
But then the merchant smiled, strangely sincere this time.
âIt will be... my gift. For being such an entertaining sovereign.â
A pause, the screen glitching.
Thenâ
The artificial face pulled away with a soft hiss.
Beneath the hologram was no merchant.
She was beautiful. Too beautiful.
Long black hair spilled like shadows across her shoulders. Eyes that gleamed like deep red velvet wine. Skin pale like starlight, yet her smileâ
Her smile wasnât normal.
Everyone just⦠stared.
Renn, quietly shaken. â...Mon? No. Youâ You were the leader of the Crimson Branch... until the rebellion.â
Her red eyes flicked to him lazily.
âCorrect.â
Kiana blinked. Something within her clicked.
The air felt thicker.
That womanâshe wasnât like Vermond.
She was like her.
They were the same kind of... creature.
Something ancient, divine, or perhaps cursed.
And MonâMon knew that Kiana understood.
Monâs smile widened. âKiana⦠Iâve watched you. Your devotion. Your madness. Your beauty. I ...admire it.â
Kianaâs gaze narrowed, her hand slowly wrapping around Vermondâs arm as if to remind Mon. â...Heâs mine.â
Mon, smiling brighter, âOh, I know. I donât want him. I want you, Kiana.â
A silence swept the command room.
Erie, Confused, whispering. âA-Ah. oh. Oh.â
Mon, tilting her head. âIâm not here for a fight. I want what you wantâorder. A new haven. Power drawn from ruins. A home built from ashes.â
She turned to Vermond, her tone shifting to a formal grace.
âLet us work together, Sovereign. Iâll bring them in. Feed them. Arm them. Help build your Super Capital Citadel.â
She paused, then.
âJust kidding about loving you, Kiana. No need to glare at me like that.â
There was a beat of silence before she added with a casual chuckle.
âIâm not interested in you nor Vermond. Iâm just... here to help you build. After all, a better world needs all kinds of hands.â
Kianaâs glare softened, her expression unreadable as she took a deep breath. But before she could react, Vermondâs voice cut through the tension.
âGood. We have work to do.â
He reached for Kianaâs hand, his usual calm demeanor returning as he began to refocus on the plans for their new empire. The atmosphere shifted quicklyâback to business.
Erie, over comms, chuckling nervously.
âMan, that was awkward. A bit too close for comfort.â
Renn, grumbling, still skeptical.
âHmph. Letâs hope we donât have more distractions. Weâve got enough work as it is.â
Jard, enthusiastically, clearly fueled by the chaos, âI canât believe it, weâre almost done with the Super Capital Citadel! With all this manpower, weâll be finished in no time. Letâs keep this going!â
Ruen, with a sigh. âYeah, sure, Jard. But the moment we finish, weâll probably be dealing with even more problems. You know how it goes.â
Vermond then turned, facing Kiana. âWe can handle it. Kiana, letâs make sure the infrastructure is secure.â
Kiana nodded silently, squeezing Vermondâs hand as she turned her focus back to the plans. Her thoughts were still on the strange encounter with Mon, but she wouldnât let it distract her. Not now.
Mon, off-screen, almost absentmindedly. âAnyway, Iâve set the resources in motion. Youâll have what you need.â
And just like that, they were back to work. A huge volume of resources began arriving, shuttles, workers, and materials pouring in at an unrelenting pace. The Super Capital Citadelâtheir Citadelâwas starting to rise. The foundation was already in place, and with Monâs help, construction was accelerating faster than anyone had imagined.
Jard, excitedly happy for it.
âThis is it! Look at these ships! Weâre turning the station into a fortress! A massive Super Capital Citadel!â
Kiana kept her focus on Vermond, but her hand was still firmly grasping his. Her eyes flicked toward Mon, whose appearance still lingered in her mind. She wasnât sure about Monâs intentions.
25 hours later..
More and more people poured into the Super Capital Citadelâits massive structures now visible even from orbit, dwarfing moons, casting wide shadows across the nearby void. The endless tide of shuttles brought workers. The Super Capital Citadel was alive, breathing, expanding.
At the heart of it, Jard stood atop a scaffold, arms wide, face lit with manic excitement.
âWeâre going to make it evenâ!â
Before he could finish, Erie rushed in like a blur and slapped his hand over Jardâs mouth.
âNo,â Erie said, voice strained but firm. "No more expansions. Let us finish this one first!â
The crowd nearby laughed, a bit of tension easing from the busy decks.
Back in the Command Center, Kiana and Vermond watched the transmission through the central display. The blueprints flickered beside them, updates streaming in real-time. Kiana leaned against Vermond, arms crossed, eyes scanning the endless data.
âHeâs going to say it again,â she muttered.
Vermond, unfazed, kept reading. âHe always does.â
Kiana let out a small sigh, though a smile played at the corner of her lips.
âBut itâs working.â
Vermond nodded slowly, his voice calm.
âYes. It's working.â
Outside, the Super Capital Citadel continued to riseâimpossibly vast, impossibly fast. The dream was no longer distant.
14 hours later..
Inside the Command Center, the core team had gathered around a massive holo-display of the Super Capital Citadelâits current unfinished interior stretching out like a hollowed titan waiting to be molded.
Jard was pacing, excited as ever.
âWeâve built the largest damn structure in the sectorânow we make it beautiful! We need color, we need design!â
Erie leaned back in his chair, arms crossed. âPure black. Sleek, elegant, intimidating. Can you imagine it? Like a void palace.â
Old man Renn immediately scoffed. âNo. Absolutely not. Weâre orbiting a blackhole, lad. You want people walking into walls thinking it's space? Weâll lose half the engineers!â
Ruen raised a brow. âWhat about a deep green? Not just any greenâdark, rich, smooth. Feels alive, like something ancient. Connected.â
Jard wrinkled his nose. âThat sounds like moldy socks.â
Mon, quiet for once, just smiled from the corner, her red eyes glinting, watching them with amusement.
Then Kiana stepped forward, her white hair almost glowing in the pale lights of the Command Center. Her voice was soft, but firm.
âPure white. Bright. Clean. Let the blackhole be the backgroundâweâll be the light in its shadow.â
Everyone turned to her. There was a pause.
Vermond looked at her, then nodded.
âSheâs right. White.â
Erie scratched the back of his head. âHuh... actually, yeah. Thatâd look... divine, in a way.â
Renn grumbled. âToo bright. But... fine. Better than black.â
Jard threw both arms in the air. âYES! White! With soft metallic trims, maybe! Like a palace in the stars!â
Mon tilted her head slightly, smiling. âWhite, then. How fitting...â
And just like that, the decision was made. The largest structure in existence, a beacon built beside a blackholeâwould shine in white.
53 hours later..
The Super Capital Citadelâno, at this point, a celestial titanâloomed in the shadow of the blackhole like a godâs throne. Its sheer size dwarfed moons, a structure so vast that it could be seen from light-years away with the right scope.
Pure white, it shimmered against the abyss like a beacon of defiance and ambition. Its surface gleamed, spotless and smooth, with thousands of massive docking bays circling its outer shellâenough to harbor fleets, armadas, even planetside evacuation ships.
Tucked beneath its layered shell were ship hangars stacked in tiersâeach able to hold hundreds of vessels, from fighters to dreadnoughts. Automated cranes, guided rails, and magnetic pads lined every corner for rapid deployment. The Citadel Sectors inside were divided meticulously: Residential zones, command hubs, industrial cores, energy control centers, research sanctuaries, cloning and medical bays, Royal Sectors and beyond thatâa section reserved for the unknown.
Its defense systems? Unholy.
Dozens of long-range orbital cannons Mon has contributed capable of melting ships at extreme distance.
Point defense turrets, anti-fighter flak, interceptor nets.
Shield arrays that rotated energy frequency in response to kinetic or energy-based assaults.
Andâdeep in the Citadelâs heartâa reactor fused with a sliver of blackhole matter, stabilizing and powering it like a caged storm.
Up top, overlooking everything, was the Observatory Domeâa massive hemisphere of military-grade enhanced space glass, reinforced and reflective, allowing them to view the infinite cosmos... and the swirling giant blackhole that felt both distant and too close. The stars, the void, and the swirling gravity monsterâalways watching.
And then there was Jardâs madness.
Heâd installed engines.
Not just any enginesâcolossal propulsion drives that even Mon we're impressed by his own creation, siphoning energy straight from the blackholeâs drag and momentum.
The Citadelâthis entire planet-sized structureâcould move.
It was no longer just a capital.
It was a Super Large, God-Tier, Mobile Capital War Citadel.
A fortress.
A home.
A weapon.
And it belonged to Vermond and Kiana.
22 hours later..
The moment came like a waveâsudden, overwhelming, and beautiful.
The Super Capital Citadel was complete.
Hundreds of millions of people stood across balconies, plazas, inner domes, and observation rings, staring up at the glowing lights of the structure they had all helped build. The white halls gleamed, the sectors pulsed with stable energy, and soft music echoed from the speaker towers planted across every section of the citadel.
Jard, standing atop a command scaffold, shouted through every comm line with a voice trembling from excitement:
âITâS DONE! LOOK AT THIS! WE BUILT A HOME THAT RIVALS GODS!â
Erie leaned on the railing beside him, laughing, finally relieved.
âWe did it⦠we actually built a Super Capital Citadel in just a F***** Week!. This might be the first time Iâm not worried about dying tomorrow.â
Ruen, beside him, eyes tired but proud, added. âEnjoy this, everyone. This moment... it's rare.â
Renn, still grumbling, wiped a tear before anyone could see.
âTch⦠itâs not perfect. But damn if it isnât beautiful.â
Mon, smiling with her black hair shimmering under the citadel's soft lights, broadcasted across the system.
âTo every soul who worked, fought, bled, and endured⦠today is yours.â
Vermond and Kiana, standing at the very topâabove the merchantâs market, at the peak of the citadelâwatched everything unfold below. Fireworks erupted from different bays, golden trails spiraling across the stars. Holograms bloomed into glowing flowers. Light shows painted the inside of the dome like living auroras.
Kiana leaned her head on Vermondâs shoulder, her voice soft, gentle:
âWe gave them a home, big brother⦠a real one.â
Vermond nodded slowly, his eyes reflecting the swirling beauty of the blackhole and the galaxy beyond.
âAnd weâre not done. But tonight⦠they deserve this.â
Celebration erupted.
Dancers filled the plazas.
Old music from every culture replayed, laughter echoed through sectors.
Children ran through the marble halls, no longer afraid.
People held hands, sang, and told stories beneath the starlit glass.
For onceâ
After all the chaos, the death, the blackhole, the madness...
They were happy.
They were home.
FOR NOW...