The wormhole was behind them now, distant and flickering like a bad memory. Inside the destroyer, quiet returnedâif only briefly. Vermond sat in the command chair, leaning forward slightly, staring at the glowing screen showing the interior of the newly acquired god-tier frigate.
It was sleek. Too clean. Its metal walls didnât hum like regular shipsâthey whispered, as if remembering ancient voices.
The undead elite walked its halls without hesitation, their motion smooth, scanning every corner.
Vermond narrowed his eyes.
The crewâthose who came from the Corvettes and fightersâwere also exploring⦠if you could call it that.
One man sat upside down in a seat, staring at a glowing panel.
Another kept pushing random buttons, saying, âMaybe if I hit this one again, coffee will come out.â
Someone else found a strange helmet-like device and put it on backward, declaring, âThis must be the throne.â
In the background, a pair of technicians were poking a floating orb that looked like a mini-sun.
âIt shocked me again,â one muttered, shaking their hand.
âThat means it likes you,â the other replied solemnly.
Erie walked into the bridge and looked at the screen. He stared silently at a man trying to ride a moving maintenance drone like a mechanical bull.
"...Are they okay?" Erie asked.
"No," Vermond said, deadpan. "But theyâre mine now."
Erie grunted and sat down next to him. âSo, whatâs the plan, commander of space lunatics?â
Vermond didnât answer right away. He tapped the screen, zooming in on the frigateâs command deck. The controls were strangeâetched with symbols that shimmered under light. A throne-like chair stood at the center, untouched. Even the undead hadnât dared to sit on it.
That made him curious.
âI want to know what this frigate really is,â he finally said. âAnd whatâs inside its systems.â
âAnd after that?â Erie asked.
Vermond turned his gaze to the illegal Federation map.
âAfter that⦠we decide where to strike first.â
Erie raised an eyebrow. âStrike?â
Vermondâs emerald eyes glowed faintly again, the number 68 flickering.
âWhatever is watching us⦠I want them to see what they let survive.â
Somewhere in the dark, the watcher smiled once again.
Deep inside the god-tier frigate, past halls of ancient metal and humming silence, one of the elite undead drifted into an isolated chamberâcameras transmitting everything back to the destroyerâs main bridge where Vermond and Erie sat.
The chamber looked like a shrine.
Blue glowing walls, a circular pool of water in the center, and⦠floating in it, perfectly stillâ¦
A girl.
She was beautiful. Almost unnaturally so. Pale skin. Long white hair drifting like silk in the liquid. Delicate, pointed ears. And she was very, very naked.
Vermond leaned forward, his eyes narrowing.
ââ¦What is that?â he muttered.
Erie, however, did not lean forward. He lunged toward the screen, knocking over a ration pack in the process. His eyes sparkled. His cheeks turned red. His noseâ
SPLURT
Blood burst out like a geyser.
âOh my god sheâsâTHATâSâWHAT EVEN IS THIS SHIPâWHY IS SHEââ
SLAP
A cold ration tin slammed across Erieâs face, launched at Mach speed by Vermondâs hand.
âCALM DOWN, pervert,â Vermond said, now holding a second ration can in warning.
Erie slumped in the seat, holding his face. âI think you broke my dignity.â
âYou never had one,â Vermond muttered.
Back on the screen, the undead paused, as if sensing the awkward tension across the fleet. The floating girl remained undisturbed, her chest rising and falling slowly, encased in some kind of stasis water. Glowing glyphs spun around the chamberâs ceiling like constellations.
Erie wiped his nose and sniffled. âDo you think sheâs friendly?â
Vermond raised an eyebrow. âDo you think I care?â
ââ¦You slapped me with beans.â
âYouâre lucky I didnât use the wrench.â
The chamber was still.
Vermond stood on the bridge of the destroyer, eyes fixed on the flickering feed coming from the frigate. Erie sat nearby, holding a wet tissue to his nose, still wounded in pride more than flesh.
And thenâ
A voice.
Soft. Familiar. Distant, yet piercing straight into his soul.
âBrotherâ¦â
His breath caught.
Kiana.
âYouâve come far. Youâve changed⦠but Iâm still here.â
Vermond stood frozen. His eyes dimmed and flickered. The number 68 shined once more, but this time⦠it pulsed slowly, like a heartbeat.
âWeâll meet again, finally.â
Suddenlyâ
BLARING ALARMS.
Sirens echoed from the frigate's comms like wails from a buried beast. Lights turned red. The chamber began to shift.
The water in the stasis pool started to bubbleânot boil, dissolve. It evaporated unnaturally, vanishing into thin air as ancient mechanisms hissed and clicked around it.
Erie stood up so fast he tripped over the chair.
âOH NO SHEâS WAKING UP SHEâS WAKING UPâwait do I look okay!?â
Vermond didnât even blink.
On-screen, the girlâs body lowered slowly from the air, her hair drifting gently around her like ghostly threads. Her toes touched the metal platform. Her chest rose. Her fingers twitched. Thenâ
Her eyes snapped open.
Emerald green.
Just like Vermondâs.
She didnât speak. She simply stared at the camera.
Vermond felt it in his chest againâlike a second soul flickering inside his own.
That was her.
That was Kiana.
Her body might be differentâtaller, more mature, radiant with some unknown divine touchâbut her soul⦠it was her.
Erie whispered beside him, âBro... she's hot.â
A wrench flew across the room and clocked him straight in the forehead.
The moment her eyes opened, Vermond didnât wait.
He bolted from the bridge like a man possessed, nearly crashing into one of the undead as he leapt into the shuttle. The drone carried him over, zipping across the vacuum from the destroyer to the god-tier frigate in record time.
Inside the frigateâs docking bay, the elite undead stood frozen, heads tilted slightly toward the stasis room, as if even they were too spooked to move.
Vermond stormed in. âOut of the way. I need⦠something!â
He scanned the nearby cratesâtools, wires, energy crystals, a suspicious half-eaten snack barâbut no clothes.
Nothing. Nada.
Exceptâ¦
The cloak he's wearing.
The god-tier cloak. Black as the void, woven from some unknowable material that shimmered with unnatural threads of ancient death energy.
Vermond stared at it, took it off from him.
Then sprinted back to the chamber.
She was still standing thereâsilent, unmoving, staring forward like she wasnât quite awake⦠or was choosing not to be.
âKiana? Okay. Cloak Here.â
With a swift, nervous flick, Vermond threw the cloak over her shoulders like a towel at a beach. It draped down dramatically, the edges floating just above the floor, pulsing slightly with strange symbols.
The girl blinked.
Didnât say a word.
But she looked regal. Like an ancient goddess rising from the dead.
Meanwhileâ
Across the frigate, one of the crew whistled.
âUhh⦠Commander? Whoâs the glowing supermodel?â
Another voice piped in: âHey, is she single or is that like a⦠death bride situation?â
âShould we salute or avert our eyes?!â
Erie, watching from the destroyer, slapped his face again with the cold wet cloth and groaned, âWe are so going to die because of beauty one day.â
Vermond sighed deeply, returning to the frigateâs bridge. âSheâs my sister,â he said firmly into the comms. âLook respectfully.â
A long silence.
Then:
ââ¦Does she have a twin?â
A second wrench was thrown.
This time, Vermond didnât miss.
The destroyerâs hangar was quiet, dimly lit by pale blue maintenance lights as the frigate docked seamlessly beside it.
The salvager drone buzzed past, carrying crates lazily, but even it seemed slower nowâlike the entire ship held its breath.
Kiana stood silently at the center of the hangar in the god-tier cloak. Her bare feet made no sound as she walked beside Vermond, who led the way with a subtle glance. No words were exchanged. She followed without resistance.
Erie was already inside.
He sat in the corner of the bridge, a ration bar half-chewed in his mouth, staring blankly at the wall as if heâd seen the very concept of beauty and decided to give up on understanding it. He wasnât looking anymore. He didnât dare.
âKianaâ¦?â he mumbled, mouth full. âIâm not even gonna ask.â
Vermond ignored him.
He led her to the command room.
They sat across from each other. Her cloak shimmered faintly, casting shadowy glimmers on the cold steel floor. She didnât blink much. Her hair hung gently down her shoulders, white as the void, and when she finally raised her gaze to meet his, Vermond froze.
Her eyes glowedâlike his.
But her number wasnât dark.
It was white.
A shimmering, uncountable hueâno number, no count, just a glimmering white mark floating endlessly like light reflected on water.
And then, finallyâ¦
ââ¦Big brother.â
Her voice was calm. Soothing. Like a dream that hadnât ended.
Vermond's chest tightened slightly.
Then she spoke againâstill calm, still sweetâbut her words struck cold.
âIâm sorry.â
A pause.
âFor lying to you. For hiding. For pretending at the start.. For becoming the orb. When you were just a salvager... I deceived you.â
Vermond stared at her, eyes flickering gently, unreadable.
She continued.
âI wanted to protect you. Or maybe I didnât trust you. Or maybe⦠I didnât trust myself.â
She lowered her gaze, blinking slowly. âAbout the god of death⦠I donât know everything. Only that something went wrong. Horribly. I wasnât meant to wake up again.â
The hum of the destroyer systems filled the silence.
Erie crunched loudly on his food in the background, then froze when he realized no one else was moving.
Finally, Vermond exhaled.
ââ¦Past is past.â
She looked up.
He gave her a tired smile. âYouâre here now.â
She blinked. Once.
And for the first time since waking, something barely visible passed across her expression.
A tiny warmth.
Maybe a memory.
Maybe a hope.
But she said nothing more.
And the silence that followed was somehow heavier than any war.
Kiana sat on the couch like sheâd always belonged there.
Wrapped in the oversized, god-tier cloak, she resembled a strange queen from another eraâregal, calm, and slightly confused about everything happening around her.
She said nothing.
She didnât blink much.
She just watched.
The destroyer bridge was buzzing. Screens flickered, undead moved in perfect rhythm, and Vermond was back at his command console reviewing the haul. Salvaged gear, black energy crystals, the new god-tier frigateâit was a jackpot of cosmic proportions.
Kiana sat with her legs tucked beneath her, gaze quietly scanning everyone. Almost curious, almost blank. Her glowing white eye number flickered faintly.
Meanwhileâ¦
Erie was trying to be normal.
Trying very, very hard.
He sat beside the console, pretending to type something.
But he wasnât typing.
Not really.
Because every twenty seconds, his eyes would sneak toward Kiana, glance once, and then whip back to the screen like heâd just remembered how to use it.
And then again.
And again.
Andâ
THUMP.
âErie,â Vermond muttered without even turning around, âif you break that keyboard, youâre salvaging a new one from the vacuum.â
âI-I wasnât looking!â Erie blurted. âI meanâI wasâbutânot in a weird way, justâlike, making sure sheâs not secretly a ghost or a soul-eating siren demon thing.â
Kiana blinked slowly at him.
Erie froze.
She tilted her head.
Then went back to watching the screen like he didnât exist.
Erie relaxed slightly. âOkay. I think she didnât hear thatâ¦â
âShe did,â Vermond said flatly.
âIâm dead,â Erie whispered.
The couch creaked slightly as Kiana shifted her weight, pulling the cloak tighter around her like it was the most natural thing to do. Her expression remained neutral. Observant.
âDoes she ever blink?â Erie whispered again.
âSheâs scanning you,â Vermond said. âProbably calculating if youâre a threat or just an idiot.â
ââ¦Rude.â
Vermond didnât smile, but his lips twitched just a little.
Kiana said nothing, her expression unreadable.
Thenâquietly, barely loud enough to hearâshe whispered:
âIdiot.â
Erie blinked.
âWhat did she just say?â
Vermond stood up before Erie could panic, patting his shoulder.
âSheâs adapting. Thatâs a good sign.â
âBut she called meââ
âIâm sure itâs just coincidence.â
âCoincidence myâ!â
Kiana turned her gaze toward him again, expression calm.
Erie turned away and stared at the wall, defeated. âI miss the time when we were just fighting cleaners and salvaging toasters.â
The engines of the undead destroyer rumbled softly as it slipped back into the void. The god-tier frigate drifted in formation, its hull shimmering faintly under the faint light of distant stars.
Kiana remained on the couch.
Still.
Silent.
Staring.
Unblinking.
Regal.
Vermond didnât question it. Neither did the undead. They just worked around her like she was furniture blessed by some ancient deityâsacred and completely untouchable.
Erie sat on the floor now. He didnât even try pretending anymore. He just munched on a ration bar and stared at the ceiling, whispering to himself things like âDonât look at her. Donât look at her. The couch is cursed.â
Back at the command console, Vermond tapped the comms.
âAnyone know a planet nearby? Somewhere we can rest. Regroup. Fix theâwell, clean the frigate.â
A crackle.
Then a voice, thick and dusty like someone who had been chewing sandpaper for fun: âAye, Commander... Thereâs a place not far from here. Old traderâs haven. Goes by the name ofââ
âPlanet Armpit!â another voice shouted in the background, followed by loud snickering.
âShut up, Drey!â the old man snapped.
Vermond blinked.
The comm crackled again as the old man tried to continue: âItâs calledâlistenâAhemâTardos Prime. Used to be a peaceful agricultural world before it got hit by an asteroid-sizedââ
âPlanet Flatbread!â someone else shouted.
Laughter exploded in the background.
The old man coughed violently, clearly about to strangle someone. âIf ONE MORE of you says anything stupid, I swear Iâll throw you out the airlock wearing only hope and duct tape!â
Someone whispered loudly: âHope and duct tape sounds like a band name.â
âI WILL END YOU.â
Vermond sighed, then chuckled under his breath. âTardos Prime, huh? Howâs it now?â
The old man grumbled, his voice sharp. âStable. Quiet. Good terrain for repairs. Not many scanners. Nobody likes visiting after the âincident.ââ
âIncident?â Vermond asked.
A pause.
Then laughter again in the background, followed by the old man yelling, âIT WAS ONE TIME! I DIDNâT KNOW THAT WAS THEIR SACRED FRUIT!â
Vermond winced.
Erie raised an eyebrow. âShould we really go there?â
From the couch, Kiana blinked for the first time in an hour.
Then, slowly⦠turned her head⦠to Erie.
Erie froze.
âOkay, okay, nevermind. Tardos Prime sounds amazing. I love sacred fruit. Letâs go.â
Kiana turned back. Unblinking once more.
âCommander,â the old man wheezed through the comms, âI suggest landing on the west side of the planet. Nice hills. Good village. No cults. Probably.â
âProbably,â Vermond repeated, smirking. âGot it. Prep for descent.â
As the stars swirled into motion and the destroyer adjusted course, Vermond glanced at Kiana one more time.
Still silent. Still watching. But nowâ¦
She looked like she was waiting.
The descent was quiet.
No voices. No jokes. Only the hum of the engines and the slow, haunting tone of the warning scanner as the undead destroyer entered the planetâs atmosphere.
Tardos Prime stretched below themâa world that once thrived with crops, color, and community.
Now... ash.
Charred fields. Burnt trees. Houses collapsed into themselves like brittle bones. Smoke rose lazily from the ruins, as if the land itself was still exhaling its last breath.
On the main screen, the wreckage of a village came into view. It was not ancient. It was recent.
Bodies lined the broken roads. Some clutched each other. Others reached toward nothing.
No signs of life. No sound but static.
From the comms, the old manâs voice was low, nearly a whisper. âI told you it was quiet. Didnât say it was peacefulâ¦â
Erie stood behind Vermond, silent. Even he couldnât think of a joke now.
âThey didnât die from war,â the old man continued. âThey were... drained. The records said it was a plague. But thisâthis wasnât a sickness. It was harvesting.â
Vermond stared at the village ruins, unmoving. Then slowly, his voice cut through the silence.
âWe salvage whatâs left.â
He didnât say it with greed. He said it with purpose. Survival. Remembrance.
Kiana didnât speak. She didnât need to. She simply sat on the couchâher eyes locked onto the screen. Still watching. Still observing. Her face unreadable, but her presence almost too still.
As Vermond stood, preparing to give orders, a subtle glow pulsed from beneath his coat.
The orb.
It trembledâbarelyâbut enough to send a chill through his chest.
And thenâ
A wave.
An invisible, silent pull.
Vermond gasped and clutched at his chest. It wasnât pain. It was weight.
Heavy.
Alive.
He could feel it. Something surging into him, not out.
His vision blurred.
In his mind, he saw... souls.
Not one. Not two.
Dozens.
Then more.
They were pouring into him. Not from the groundâbut from the village.
The orb was consuming the remnants. The ghosts. The memories. The echoes of the dead.
His eyes widened as the glowing number in them began to shift rapidly.
68â¦
76â¦
88â¦
97â¦
103â¦
109.
Then, silence.
He stumbled slightly. Erie caught him by the shoulder.
âWhat the hell just happened?â Erie asked.
Vermond didnât answer at first. His gaze drifted to the smoldering village, then to the orb nestled against his chest. It no longer glowed with that quiet thrum.
Now it pulsed⦠with hunger.
âIt took them,â Vermond finally said. âThe orb⦠it took their souls.â
Kianaâs voice came softly from the couch, still watching the screen, her tone calm but distant:
âSome places are graveyards, big brother⦠but others⦠are offerings.â
The words hung heavy in the air.
The village lay still.
But now⦠it felt emptier.
The salvage teams dispersed.
Undead and crew alike moved carefully through the remains of the villageârusted tools, shattered dishes, burnt fabrics clinging to crumbled walls. They scanned. Searched. Dug.
But there was⦠nothing.
No metals worth taking. No fuel. No cores.
Just silence, and the smell of dust and loss.
The ground cracked beneath their boots, ash rising with every step. Most buildings had nothing but charred beams and collapsed roofs.
Untilâ
One of the elite undead paused.
It stood motionless between two leaning walls of a ruined house. Then it turned slightly, tilting its head like it was listening. Or sensing.
Then it saw them.
A man. A father, from the look of him. His back pressed to the crumbled wall, arms wrapped around the small body in his chest. A little girl, barely more than five.
His body was riddled with three bullet holes. Clean shots. Tactical. Execution-style.
He died shielding her.
Her arms were curled into his coat, face hidden.
The elite undead stepped closer, silently kneeling beside them.
It didn't breathe. Didnât speak.
Its pale hands moved slowlyârespectfullyâchecking for anything to carry back. Not to scavenge⦠but to remember.
It reached into the manâs pocket.
Dust spilled out first. Then a small item.
A bracelet.
Woven from thin strings of wood and dried vines. Handcrafted. Imperfect.
Another one lay gently wrapped around the girlâs tiny wrist.
A pair.
The elite undead paused. The camera feed showed its stillness to the destroyerâs bridge.
Vermond watched.
He didnât say a word.
Kiana didnât move from the couch. But her eyes⦠were locked on the screen. Her expression unreadable, but her lips trembled.
Even Erie stood quiet behind them, his usual grin nowhere to be found.
The undead reached down, and without a sound, slid the bracelet from the manâs hand.
Then carefully, it placed both bracelets together in a cloth and secured it to its side.
A mark of what once was.
As the undead rose, Vermond whispered.
âBring them back. Both.â
The elite undead nodded once, almost human in the motion, and slowly carried the two bodies to the salvage drone.
The sun above the ruined village cast no warmthâjust a dull, orange light over the broken earth.
Vermond stepped out of the destroyer.
He didnât say a word.
Boots pressed into the blackened soil as he moved past the wreckage. He picked up an old shovel leaning beside a scorched doorway. Its wooden handle was cracked, but still whole.
âDrone,â Vermond said softly.
The salvager drone followed, humming gently, its tractor beam off for nowâjust a silent companion.
Erie and Kiana remained on the destroyer, watching through the live feed. Erie leaned against the wall, arms crossed, lips pressed together.
Kiana sat on the couch, her eyes soft⦠but empty. The screen flickered across her pale gaze.
Vermond began digging.
The soil was stubbornâhalf-ash, half-stoneâbut he didnât stop. His breath was steady. His movements slow. An elite undead stood beside him, motionless, watching in silence like a guardian of grief.
After what felt like hours, the hole was ready.
Vermond carefully lifted the two bodiesâfather and daughterâand placed them side by side, as gently as he could.
He knelt for a moment.
No words. Just breath.
And silence.
He put the soil back. One scoop at a time.
As the last bit fell into place, Vermond froze.
His hand trembled.
A tear fell.
Just one.
And then⦠somewhereâhe didnât know whereâbut somewhere in the stillness of that broken place⦠he felt something warm.
Two lights.
Two gentle souls.
Smiling at him.
Vermond closed his eyes.
Grandpa⦠you seeinâ this?
Somewhere, beyond the veil of death, his grandfather smiled.
The fatherâs soul and the daughterâs soul drifted to him. No fear. No hatred. Only peace.
He felt them.
And thenâhis eyes flickered.
109.
The soul count flickered⦠and yet, it felt lighter.
Vermond stood, his hand clenched around the old shovel.
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
âDig every grave,â he said to the comms. His voice cracked only once. âGive them peace.â
The drone hummed back to life.
Undead scattered.
Each began to dig. Each began to carry what remained.
It was no longer salvage.
It was remembrance.
The sun had begun to dip lower now, casting long shadows over the graves.
Dozens of them.
Each freshly dug.
Each carefully covered.
Vermond sat beside one, arms resting over his knees, the shovel half-buried in the soil beside him. Dirt clung to his gloves. His back ached. His breath was shallow. But he didnât move.
The drone hovered nearby silently, its lights dimmed as if it, too, was mourning.
From the side ramp of the destroyer, Kiana stepped down. Quiet as a feather.
She walked across the scorched earth, barefoot, the god-tier cloak wrapped around her pale form like a whisper of shadows. Her glowing emerald eyes locked onto her brotherâher steps slow but determined.
She stopped in front of him.
Vermond, sitting at the wooden crate, looked up.
Tired. Dust-streaked. Silent.
Kiana dropped to her knees in front of himâand hugged him.
Tight.
Not soft. Not gentle.
Tight.
Like she was trying to hold together every shattered piece of him.
Vermond froze.
He hadn't been hugged like that in years.
And thenâhe felt it.
Something inside Kiana. Something deep.
It wasnât just warmth.
It was him.
His grief. His exhaustion. His buried sorrow. All of it.
She felt everything.
As if her soul was stitched to his.
âItâs okay to cry,â she whispered.
Vermond's breath caught.
He looked at herâeyes wide, tremblingâand suddenly he saw his grandfather again.
Standing by the old salvage ship. Laughing. Teaching him how to fix a broken fuel line. The smell of engine grease. The old man's voice saying, "You donât have to be strong every moment, kiddo. Youâre not a machine."
Thatâs when the tears came.
Silently at first.
Then he crumbled.
His shoulders shook as he buried his face in his sisterâs shoulder, letting it all fall out. The loss. The weight. The dead. The guilt. Everything.
Kiana held him tighter.
No words.
Just warmth.
Thenâ
Crunch⦠crunchâ¦
Footsteps.
Erie walked over holding⦠two cans of fruit.
âHey, uhâ¦â He knelt awkwardly beside them, holding out the cans. âIâI brought fruit? In case you, like, wanted vitamin C while cryingâ¦â
Kiana just blinked at him.
Vermondâmid-sobâlooked up with the ugliest teary face and just snorted.
Erie blinked, then added, âThis one has peach slices! Thatâs⦠emotional, right?â
Kiana looked between the two of them.
Then smirked.
Vermond laughedâwet, ragged, but realâand wiped his eyes with a filthy sleeve.
ââ¦Youâre an idiot,â Vermond muttered to Erie.
âYeah,â Erie replied. âBut I brought two spoons.â
The night settled gently around them, the stars flickering overhead like silent watchers of sorrow and warmth.
Vermond leaned against the hull of the destroyer now, his head resting back, eyes still puffy from crying. Kiana sat beside him, legs crossed, the edge of the cloak brushing against the dusty ground. Erie was awkwardly squatting a few steps away, still holding the second spoon like a weapon.
There was silence.
Gentle.
Healing.
Kiana turned to Vermond, resting her head lightly on his shoulder. The pulse of the shared connection between them still hummed softly in her chestâhis sadness, his memories.
âBig brother,â she whispered, so softly only he could hear. âYou have to stay strong. You always have. But this timeâ¦â
She leaned in, her voice a breath:
ââ¦you donât have to be strong alone.â
Then she kissed his cheek.
Tender.
No theatrics.
Just family.
Vermond didnât move.
He just closed his eyes.
Felt the warmth of it. Let it bury into his heart like a new promise.
And thenâ
"WH-WHAâHUHH?!"
Erieâs voice shattered the peace like a meteor through glass.
He had dropped both cans. They rolled across the dirt like tiny fleeing witnesses to a scandal.
âD-DID YOU JUSTâ?! I-I THOUGHTâBUT YOUâREâHUHHH?!â
Vermond opened one eye, looking at him with a dead stare. ââ¦Sheâs my sister.â
Kiana turned to Erie with an almost angelic blink. âYes.â
Erieâs jaw hung open like an ancient temple door. âThat was so pure and yet so confusing. I thought you were gonna turn into a goddess and marry him or something!â
Kiana tilted her head, confused. âWhy would I do that?â
Vermond sighed and rubbed his temples. âErie. Breathe.â
âI am breathing!! Through my eyes!!â
Kiana blinked again, turned to Vermond, and whispered calmly: âBig brother, Is he always like this?â
âEvery day,â Vermond muttered.
They all sat there quietly for a second.
Then a loud pop! echoed across the quiet.
Erie had opened one of the fruit cans and was now eating in betrayal silence.
âI just⦠I just needed a snack,â he grumbled.
Vermond leaned back again, exhausted, but now with a small smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth.
ââ¦Thanks, Kiana.â
The seventeen crew members stationed aboard the ancient frigate had set up a temporary camp outside, just beyond the perimeter of the undead destroyer. They were surrounded by quiet wilderness and wreckage, the air filled with the crackle of flames and the scent of reheated ration stew. A few of them were joking, another roasted a stick of something that used to be meat, and two were fiercely arguing over whether their âlegendary findâ was a priceless alien artifact or just a piece of bent ship metal.
Erie sat by the edge of the fire, poking the flames with a stick. âThis planetâs not bad,â he muttered, âif you ignore the corpses and emotional trauma.â
Thenâ
BOOM.
A thunderous blast ripped across the sky. The fire flickered wildly as a searing light split the dark heavens above them.
Everyone turned.
Ships.
Dozens of themâmaybe moreâstreaking across the atmosphere in chaotic motion. Explosions bloomed in the air like fireflowers, each louder and brighter than the last. Red trails, blue beams, something that looked suspiciously like a flying tankâ¦
Kiana, still wrapped in the god-tier cloak, stood from her seat inside the destroyerâs observation deck, peering out the viewing pane.
Erie squinted upward. âWhat theâthose Federation? Pirates? A rogue food delivery fleet gone mad?!â
Vermond calmly approached, sipping from a steaming mug of something bitter. He glanced up at the sky like he was checking for rain.
He watched one ship spiral down in flames before it disappeared behind a distant ridge.
Then, with absolute, unshakable calm, he took a seat by the fire and said:
ââ¦Letâs just wait. Watch them blow each other up.â
Everyone stared at him.
âWhat?â he said, taking another sip. âWeâre salvagers. Thatâs free loot falling from the sky.â
Erie blinked. âYouâre not even worried about the battlefield up there?!â
Vermondâs eyes glowed faintly green as he stared into the flames.
âNope. Let the credits come to us.â
One of the frigate crew leaned toward Erie and whispered, âIs he always like this?â
Erie sighed. âOnly when heâs smart.â
Kiana sat silently behind them, her white hair gently catching the firelight, watching the sky with a strange calm.
ââ¦It begins again,â she murmured, almost to herself.
"Free fireworks show." Erie muttered.
And in the sky, another massive explosion lit up the nightâone of the ships being split in half.
Vermond raised his mug slightly in its direction. âTo future salvage.â
Hours passed.
The camp had quieted down. Most of the crew were snoring in their makeshift tents, some curled up inside crates, and one poor soul had passed out while still holding a ration bar halfway to his mouth. The fire was dying to glowing embers, flickering shadows across the side of the ancient frigate.
High above them, the battle still raged on.
Explosions lit up the night sky like some twisted fireworks show that forgot to end. Ships darted and danced in a deadly ballet, occasional debris streaking down like angry stars.
Inside the command room of the destroyer, only a few lights were still on. Vermond sat in his usual spot, arms crossed, eyes scanning the visuals in silent interest. Kiana had dozed off on the couch again, like she hadnât just been reborn from a floating tomb.
The old manâs voice crackled from the comms.
âWell, son,â he began, his tone as dry as space dust, âI ainât seen a battle go on this long since the Great Fish Market Brawl of Sector 6.â
Vermond blinked. ââ¦What.â
âOh yeah,â the old man continued. âWas a war over tuna. Three traders, two dozen pirates, and a religious cult all swore that fish was theirs. Took two days, and in the end? Turned out to be a mislabeled crate of socks.â
Erie, half-asleep and face-planted into the armrest, mumbled, âDid⦠did the socks win?â
âNah. But they did smell like fish.â
Another explosion shook the sky.
The old man sighed through the static. âThis one, though⦠galactic-level. You donât fight this long unless somebody owes somebody a planet, or somebody else kissed the wrong queen.â
Vermond sipped from his now-cold mug and muttered, âOr both.â
From outside, one of the undead silently stared at the sky. Then, very slowly, tilted its head like it, too, was wondering if they were about to salvage royalty or just another burning garbage barge.
Vermond leaned back with a smirk.
ââ¦Let âem tire themselves out. Then we strike.â
Another explosion, brighter than the rest, bloomed across the stars.
âShowtimeâs not over yet,â the old man said. âGet some popcorn. Or socks.â
The night was peaceful. Kind of. The sky was still glowing with spacefire, but on the surface of the planet, things had settled into a weird kind of normal.
Kiana was curled up under a blanket on the couch again, calmly watching the stars. Erie was asleep with a piece of bread halfway into his mouth, mumbling something about âmysterious space muffins.â The old man was snoring on commsâyes, somehow.
Thenâ¦
BOOOOOOOOM!!!
The sky screamed and the ground shook. Everyone jolted awake as a half-melted Corvette came spiraling out of the atmosphere like an angry drunk pigeon, crashing into the dirt a few clicks outside the village and exploding into a fiery mess that shook the trees and launched a cow-sized piece of wreckage into a nearby crater.
Erie screamed, flipping backwards off his sleeping mat. âWEâRE UNDER ATTACK! I KNEW THOSE MUFFINS WERE REAL!â
Vermond calmly stood, watching the smoke rise from the new crash site. ââ¦Guess someone lost.â
Kiana, still wrapped in her blanket, yawned. âBig brother should check itâ
Vermond tapped into the comms. âElite unit. Six of you, move. Take cams. Investigate.â Even though they already know what to do.
Six undead, fully armored and completely unbothered by the fiery crash or Erieâs panicking, deployed instantly. Their cams blinked on in Vermondâs screen.
They marched through the dark village ruins toward the wreckage. The Corvette was scorched, ripped in half by atmosphere and impact. Metal still sizzled and popped as the undead entered the burning remains.
One of the undead paused. Its camera focused on a faint red lightâa survival pod, wedged between twisted metal.
The hatch had been forcefully ejected.
Then⦠they saw him.
A man. Unconscious. Lying facedown in dirt, half-covered in ash, one arm twitching slightly. His uniform, though scorched and tattered, still bore the Federation insignia across the shoulder.
One of the undead zoomed the cam in.
His ID tag: Lt. Ruen Halstead.
Vermond leaned forward, eyes narrowing. "The Federation?"
Kiana, now fully awake, sat up. âBig brother, heâs still alive.â
Erie blinked, standing beside them. âDid we just catch a Federation guy like a falling fruit?â
Vermond didnât answer immediately. His eyes were locked on the screen.
âBring him in,â he finally ordered.
The undead carefully lifted the manâs unconscious body, and the salvage drone arrived seconds later, tractor-beaming both the pod remains and the officer toward the destroyer.
Vermondâs thoughts grew heavy. What was a Federation officer doing in that battle⦠and why did he crash here?
The skies still burned.
The room was dimâpartially to hide the creepy undead standing near the wall, and partially because Erie had accidentally knocked out one of the ceiling lights and forgot to fix it. Ruen Halstead sat on a metal chair, his body bandaged and bruised, still reeling from the crash. His uniform bore burn marks, the Federation logo barely visible now.
In front of him sat Kiana.
Hair like moonlight. Cloaked in mystery. Calm as ever.
Ruen blinked as he stared at her, clearly dazed. âAm⦠am I in heavenâ¦?â
Kiana tilted her head, not reacting. Vermond and Erie, crouched behind the wall with a mic feed open to Kiana's ear, immediately whispered in:
Vermond: âDonât answer that. Let him keep thinking he's dead.â
Erie: âTell him he's in space purgatory and the fee is twenty credits.â
Kiana ignored them. She simply watched as Ruen slowly sat up straighter. His eyes flicked around the roomâthen widened in horror as he noticed the elite undeads, looked like a elite special force, standing perfectly still in the corner, their glowing eyes fixated on him.
âWhat the hellâare you with the Folkan?!â Ruen shouted, panic rising in his voice.
Kiana remained silent. The undead didnât move.
Meanwhile, Vermond and Erie were hiding in a cramped maintenance closet, peeking through a crack in the door.
Erie (whispering): âHeâs panicking. Thatâs good. Now we mind-game him.â
Vermond: âKiana, lean in a bit. Just enough to look dramatic.â
She did, calmly.
Ruen finally exhaled, dropping his shoulders. ââ¦Youâre not Folkan, are you?â His voice turned grim. âDamn things wouldâve killed me alreadyâ¦â
He looked up, pain flashing across his face.
âOur mothershipâs gone. Betrayed from the inside. Some of our own officers sided with the Folkan. They fed them coordinates, fleet paths⦠the bastards knew everything. We tried to retaliate. Lost half the fleet doing it. And their second name was Folako, third name was Folanko, I've just learned it a few days ago.â
Erie then whispered. "They have many names... Why the hell do they need that many."
Kianaâs brows twitched slightly.
Ruen continued, âIf we had just recovered that mapâthe one stolen back on Black Spire stationâwe couldâve reacted faster. The whole layout of outer sectors, emergency jumps, hidden outposts⦠it was all in there.â
He looked away.
âThe Federationâs falling apart. Whatâs left of us is fighting up there. Just ships full of ghosts, barely holding the line against folkan fleets and some dogs.â
The room grew still.
Back in the closet, Erie whispered, âDid he say the map was stolen⦠back at the station?â
Vermond nodded. âThe one we took.â
âHa! Weâre the bastards!â
Kianaâs voice finally broke the silence in the room. Calm. Steady.
ââ¦You are safe now.â
Ruen blinked. Her words cut through like a warm breeze in a frozen room.
âWho are you?â he asked.
Kiana stood, not answering. She walked to the door, glanced once at the elite undeadâthen stepped out.
Vermond and Erie scrambled backward in the closet.
Ruen stared at the door after it closed.
ââ¦Am I still in purgatory?â
Inside the command chamber of the undead destroyer, the illegal Federation map flickered. The screen above showed the ongoing battle in orbitâblinding flashes, broken hulls spinning like burning leaves, and the chaotic ballet of war. It had been hours. The debris field had tripled in size.
Vermond leaned over the console, eyes narrowed. Erie sat beside him, one leg propped up, munching on something suspiciously crunchy.
Kiana?
She was on the couch again. A soft pillow tucked under her arms, watching the two as if they were putting on a mildly amusing stage play. Quiet. Observant. And unreadable as ever.
âWe canât join that battle,â Vermond muttered, tapping on the screen. âToo risky. That fleet would either shoot us down⦠or panic if they saw a god-tier frigate and an undead destroyer creeping around.â
Erie nodded. âYup. Besides, I didnât sign up to be target practice for a battleship railgun.â
Kiana blinked once. No comment.
âThen thereâs Ruen,â Vermond said. âHeâs Federation. Possibly high-ranking. And he thinks weâre space heaven.â
Erie scratched his chin. âWhat if we play along? Let him think heâs being tested by space angels? Or⦠space necro-angels.â
Kiana turned her head slightly toward Erie. Her face didnât move. But her eyes said: Really?
âOkay okay,â Erie raised his hands, âno fake angel cult. But seriously, what do we do with him? If he finds out the truth about us and decides to scream âNECROMANCYâ at the wrong time, weâre gonna have a fleet on our backs.â
Vermond exhaled.
Kiana got up quietly, walked over to the screen showing Ruen still sitting alone in the debrief room, and stared at it. Her fingers slowly reached to touch the image. Then she said, softly,
âHeâs scared.â
Both boys paused.
âAnd broken.â
She turned to Vermond, eyes unreadable.
âBig brother, youâll know what to do.â
Then she went back to the couch, sat down, and resumed watching them with that quiet âSister watching her dumb brothers plan war crimesâ vibe.
Erie turned to Vermond. âWell. Thatâs helpful.â
Vermond chuckled dryly. âI think that was helpful⦠in her Kiana way.â
The plan continued. No final decisions were made yet. But as the battle raged above, one thing was clear:
They couldnât hide forever.
The old table in the corner of the ship's war room was cluttered with open ration packs, half-finished mugs of something probably not coffee, and a crumpled napkin with a very poorly drawn map of the planet. Erie was holding a marker, confidently circling random craters like they were strategic assets.
âSo,â he said, âwhat if we lure the Folkan here with a fake distress signal, then make Ruen think heâs leading an op, while we just... puppet things from the shadows?â
Vermond just stared at him.
âThat,â Vermond said slowly, âsounds like itâll blow up in ten minutes.â
Kiana was in her usual couch spot, one leg up, sipping on something pink and fizzy. No one knew where she got it. No one dared ask. Her face remained emotionless, but her brow raised ever so slightly every time Erie suggested something chaotic.
Vermond sighed and leaned back. âWe need information first. If the Folkan or should I say Folako and Folanko destroyed a mothership and took over Federation sectors, that means theyâve already advanced deeper than the charts say.â
Erie nodded, finally dropping the marker. âAnd if that map he mentioned really exists⦠we need it. Or make it look like we have it.â
Kiana swirled her drink. âBait.â
Both boys turned to her. That one word held more strategy than the past hour of scribbled nonsense.
Vermond nodded slowly. âSheâs right. If we can leak somethingâmake it look like Ruen is carrying that mapâtheyâll come for him.â
Erie frowned. âThatâs dangerous for him.â
Kiana looked at Erie for a long second, then tilted her head. âDo you care?â
Erie blinked. âNo. Just saying.â
Vermond smirked. âWe can protect him. Use him as bait without him knowing it.â
âClassic,â Erie mumbled, grabbing another ration pack. âPoor guy thinks heâs in angel daycare. Meanwhile weâre plotting five layers of backstabbing warfare.â
Suddenly, the camera on the debrief room pinged. Ruen had started pacing.
Vermond tapped the screen. âHeâs getting impatient.â
Kiana got up and walked toward the screen again. She stood next to Vermond, arms crossed.
âHeâs remembering things.â
Erie blinked. âYou meanâlike what?â
âWar,â she said. âFire. People screaming. Friends dying.â
Vermond turned toward her. âYou can feel that?â
Kiana didnât answer.
Instead, she gently placed a hand on the console and whispered, âWe wait⦠until he tells us the rest.â
Then she walked back to the couch and resumed watching.
Erie leaned toward Vermond and muttered, âYour sister is way cooler than you, man.â
Vermond elbowed him. âI know.â
The corridor to the interrogation room was dimly lit, the overhead lights flickering as if the ship itself could feel the tension building. Vermond walked ahead with Erie trailing behind, chewing nervously on a snack stick.
âI still think we shouldâve interrogated him with fire and drama,â Erie muttered. âLike those classic spy flicks. I had lines ready, man.â
Vermond ignored him.
Just as they reached the door to the room, Kiana, who had been silently trailing behind them, stepped closer and gently took hold of Vermondâs arm.
He paused.
Then, without a word, Kiana leaned in close⦠and softly bit Vermondâs ear.
Vermond froze, blinking.
Erie dropped his snack.
âWhat theââ Erie sputtered. âWhat was that!? Was that a SIBLING BITE?? Is this normal where you're from?! Should I be worried?!â
Kiana simply let go, stepping back with the faintest hint of a smile on her lips. âIt means âwake upâ in some cultures,â she said calmly.
Vermond, still a little stunned, muttered, âWhat cultures...?â
Kiana walked past both of them toward the room without answering. Erie leaned over to Vermond, whispering, âBro. Your sisterâs terrifying. But in like... a majestic way.â
âI know,â Vermond sighed, rubbing his ear. âI really know.â
Inside the room, Ruen sat slouched, arms bound, but clearly not too concerned anymore. His eyes, bloodshot from exhaustion, locked onto the figure entering the dim light.
Kiana.
She walked slowly, barefoot, silent. The god-tier cloak draped around her flowed like liquid shadow, and her emerald eyes gleamed faintlyâeyes that saw too much. Eyes that whispered of death and memory, yet somehow⦠glowed with innocence.
Ruen sat straighter, his voice catching in his throat.
âYou⦠again.. youâreâ¦â he swallowed. âA goddess⦠no. No, more than a goddessâ¦â
Kiana didnât respond. She simply tilted her head, watching him with a blank expression, the soft click of her footsteps echoing unnaturally.
In a hidden corner behind the wall, Vermond and Erie were crouched beside a control console, watching the feed.
Erie whispered, âOkay, okay, new rule. No more letting Kiana go solo. She's turning this into a divine cult interview.â
Vermond didnât blink, eyes focused. âSheâs reading him. Let her.â
Back in the room, Ruen seemed entranced. âAre you⦠real?â he asked. âOr some kind of projection? Iâ I donât know why I feel like telling you everything.â
Kiana finally spoke. Her voice was like glass, smooth and fragile. âYou are broken. You are lost. You look for meaning in faces that seem familiar.â
Ruen blinked, suddenly unsure. âWhat...?â
She leaned forward, just a little, her long white hair cascading down her shoulder. âWould you kill for me?â
Erie whispered, âBRO, WHAT IS SHE DOING?!â
Vermond hissed, âShut up, sheâs fishing for loyalty.â
âIââ Ruen stammered. âI donât⦠even know who you areâ¦â
âIâm Kiana,â she whispered. âBut Iâve been other things too.â
The lights in the room flickered.
Ruen shivered.
Then she straightened, stepping back as if satisfied.
Ruen sat there, stunned, uncertain whether heâd just been interrogated⦠or reborn.
Kiana walked out slowly, expression unreadable. As she passed the hidden door, Vermond and Erie emerged, Erie still wide-eyed.
âKiana,â Erie whispered, âWhat the hell was that?â
She didnât even glance back. âA test.â
Vermond narrowed his eyes. âDid he pass?â
Kiana gave the faintest smirk. âMaybe.â
Kiana sat quietly on the bridge couch again, legs tucked beside her, cloak draped like a queenâs robe. Her white hair shimmered under the console lights, and her green eyesâthose strange, pale-umber emeraldsâwatched everything with that same ghostlike stillness.
Erie peeked at her, slowly leaning toward Vermond.
âSheâs as beautiful as ever,â he whispered dramatically, âHer hairâs like the freakinâ moon, her eyes are straight-up carved emeralds... and her bodyâbro, câmon! Her bodyâs perfect!â
Vermond didnât even flinch. âFocus.â
âI am focused,â Erie said, then added under his breath, â...on appreciating fine architecture.â
âWant me to toss you in the recycler?â
ââ¦Iâll behave.â
Kiana blinked slowly. âI can hear both of you,â she said softly.
They froze.
Then she tilted her head slightly toward them. âBig brother and Erie talk like children. Itâs cute.â
Vermond stiffened. Erie melted.
But then⦠something shifted.
Her expression faltered. Not muchâbut her fingers trembled. Just once. Vermond noticed. Kianaâs lips pressed together, and for the first time, she seemed unsure. Her gaze shifted away from them, down to her lap.
Erie whispered, âWait⦠is sheâ?â
âKiana,â Vermond said, stepping closer. âAre you alright?â
âI donât know,â she whispered. âSometimes⦠I feel things I donât understand. Echoes.â
Her eyes turned toward himâwide, almost scared.
âI laugh at things that arenât funny. I feel sad when I smell smoke. I feel⦠guilt, when I see stars. I think itâs yours, brother.â
Vermondâs breath caught.
âOr maybe... it's mine,â she added.
There was a strange silence.
Erie, holding a ration bar, slowly sat next to her and offered it. âWant one? These taste like wet concrete, but theyâre comforting somehow.â
She took it, stared at it, and whispered, âYouâre very strange.â
âYouâre not wrong.â
She smiledâbut then⦠a tear slipped down her cheek.
And she didnât seem to notice.
Vermond knelt in front of her.
âEven if you feel echoes, Kiana⦠even if you're something else nowâyouâre still you. Youâre still my sister.â
Kiana looked at him for a long time.
Then leaned in, hugged him tightâand whispered, âIâm scared, Big brother.â
For the first time.
That vulnerability.
Erie sniffled. âThis is emotional, man... Iâm not crying, you're crying.â
âYou are crying.â
âShut up.â
Time passed. Vermond, Erie, and Kiana returned to what they now called their so-called purgatoryâthe interrogation room.
Ruen sat under the cold light of the interrogation chamber, sweat dripping from his temple. He looked at Kiana, still blushingâbut this time, his expression was serious, worn, and a little⦠broken.
âIâll tell you everything,â he said.
Vermond and Erie, crouched behind a wall, mics in Kianaâs ear, nodded in unison.
âGo on,â Kiana said softly, her face unreadable.
Ruen leaned forward. âBack at the station... before the chaos⦠a princeâsome lost royal, or so he claimedâhanded me something. Said it was my last chance to survive whatâs coming.â
He reached into a hidden pouch and pulled out a small crystalline shardâglowing. But not like Vermondâs orb. This one⦠shone. Soft, pulsing, almost like a living thing. It radiated lightâwarm, soothing, unnatural.
Vermond narrowed his eyes.
That artifact didnât hum with death. It pulsed with⦠life. The opposite of everything his own orb represented. And yetâsomething stirred within his chest.
Thenâ
THUMP.
Vermond clutched his chest as the orb embedded within him pulsed, as if it had smelled something delicious. It respondedânot with darkness, but with a strange hunger. It wanted the light.
âVermond?â Erie whispered. âAre you okay? Youâre glowing. Dude. Youâre glowingâmore than usual.â
The artifact in Ruenâs hands suddenly floatedâdragged from his palms. His eyes widened in terror.
âW-Wait, what?!â
Kiana calmly stepped aside as the shard floated across the air, a soft whistle echoing through the silenceâ
âand then it slammed into Vermondâs chest, melting into the orb like rain into a fire.
Silence.
The lights flickered aboard the destroyer.
Thenâa pulse.
A cold wave blasted through the ship.
Erie gasped. âUh⦠Vermond? You just⦠did something.â
The undead aboard the shipâworking, monitoring, maintainingâfroze.
And thenâ¦
They changed.
Skin appearedâveins, faces, hair. The undead looked human now. Almost alive.
Almost.
Because their eyesâ
Their eyes were pure white. Unmoving. Unblinking.
One elite undead walked calmly past the camera. He reached for his helmet and removed itârevealing a clean-cut man, handsome, youthful.
But his face didnât move.
His chest didnât rise.
No breath.
No heartbeat.
Just white, dead eyes staring straight ahead like something from a horror movie that forgets it's pretending.
Erie stood up slowly, wide-eyed. âW-Wha⦠What the hell is that?! They look like⦠us! But not us. But... AAAAAAâ!â
Ruen backed into the wall, mouth agape.
âThisâthis wasnât supposed to happen! That artifact was a gift! A gift from light! What are you people?!â
Kiana turned to him, still serene.
âYou gave light to darkness,â she said. âAnd now⦠itâs become something new.â
Vermond stood at the edge of the bridge, hand over his heart. He felt the orb thrum with both death and life.
He looked at one of his elite undead now standing before himâperfect human appearance⦠white soulless stare.
â...You still with me?â Vermond asked.
The undead nodded once.
âYes⦠Captain.â
The voice was clear. Human.
Yet⦠wrong.
Erie backed away. âOh no. Oh no no no. This is like if necromancy and plastic surgery.. And the undeads can now talk?!â
Kiana slowly walked forward, her white hair glistening, and smiled faintly.
âTheyâre evolving. And so are you, big brother.â
Ruenâs heart pounded as the strange warmth of the artifact faded from his fingers.
âIâI need answers,â he said, gripping the chair beside him. âWhat just happened? What are youâ?â
Kiana didnât speak.
She simply walked up to him, leaned slightly closer, and raised a single finger to his lips.
âShh.â
Ruen blinked. His brain blue-screened. His whole system crashed.
He stared at her, cheeks flaring bright red. âIâuhâyes maâam.â
Erie snorted from her corner, whispering under her breath, âDamn. Sheâs like a glitch in a manâs soul.â
Vermond, now composed, stepped forward. His hand still rested over his chest, the orb beneath his skin pulsing gently. âRuen⦠come with us.â
Ruen hesitated but nodded, trailing behind them like a confused puppy as they led him through the corridors of the undead destroyer.
Doors hissed open.
And there they were.
Dozens of undeads, or should we say, a none breathing crew members.
Some walking past, some standing by consoles, some standing perfectly still like statues.
They looked alive. Their uniforms clean. Hair neatly in place.
But none of them blinked.
None breathed.
All their eyes were blank whiteâlike marbled glass reflecting something far away.
Ruen froze mid-step. â...What the hell is this place?â
One of the elite undead passed by, helmet under his arm. He gave a crisp nod.
âAfternoon, sir.â
Ruen screamed internally.
Erie whispered near his ear, âYeah. You get used to it. Kind of. Not really. I still pee a little sometimes.â
On the bridge, the eerie calm was even stronger. A pale blue light washed the room. The controls all moved on their own, operated by silent hands.
Kiana was already thereâsitting on her usual spot on the plush couch, her legs crossed, gaze distant. She looked like a queen in a court of ghosts.
Ruen looked around nervously⦠then sat himself on the floor, directly in front of the couch.
Vermond smirked. âComfortable?â
âNo.â
âGood.â
Erie leaned on a railing and whispered to Vermond, âYou gonna tell him?â
âYeah.â
Vermond turned toward Ruen. âWe want you to act as bait.â
âExcuse me?!â Ruenâs voice cracked like a dry twig.
âItâs simple. Youâre Federation. You walk into a place, you look lost, theyâll talk to you before they shoot you.â
âNo no no. Iâm not dying for whatever undead cult you're running in this flying haunted houseââ
Then he looked up.
Kiana was staring at him.
Not blinking.
Expression neutral.
Eyes deep and unreadable.
He shrank under that look like a leaf under a magnifying glass. His heart tap-danced into his throat.
âI mean⦠I guess I could consider itâ¦â he mumbled.
Kiana tilted her head slightly.
ââ¦Fine. Iâll do it.â
Erie burst out laughing behind a hand. âBro, she didnât even say a word! Youâre down bad!â
Ruen grumbled, face red, staring at the floor again. âShe looks like the moon gave up heaven to become humanâ¦â
Vermond walked past him, patting his shoulder with a grin. âDonât worry. Weâll keep you mostly alive.â
The comms buzzed with a familiar, scratchy voiceâold man Rennâs, the oldest engineer in the god-tier frigate, currently camping outside with sixteen others who still had no idea they were surrounded by literal undead.
âHey! Hey, kid!â the Old man called out. âThese elite guys of yours? THEY FINALLY SPOKE!â
Vermond, lounging casually on the bridge of the undead destroyer, raised an eyebrow.
âThey did?â Vermond asked, pretending to know nothing.
âYeah!â Renn's voice cracked with excitement. âOne walked past, looked me dead in the eyeâwell, more like through my soulâand just said: âMove.â Thatâs it! âMove!â I almost short-circuited my own pacemaker!â
Kiana was sipping juice on the couch, legs crossed elegantly, while Erie muttered beside her, âI told them not to go near him...â
âAnd get this!â Renn continued, voice going from thrilled to suspicious. âTheir eyes? PURE white! No pupils, no iris, no nothing. I think⦠I think theyâre wearing some kinda eye contacts! You know, the creepy ones you buy from sketchy vendors at discount Halloween shops!â
One of the elite undead on the destroyer paused mid-walk, as if it heard that through sheer telepathy. It tilted its head slowly toward the camera with its dead white eyes. Erie quickly slammed the monitor off.
âNOPE.â
Vermond leaned toward the mic. âRenn⦠just donât ask them to take the contacts out, alright?â
âWhy? Whatâs gonna happen? Their eyes gonna shoot lasers or somethinâ? Waitâdo they even blink? Iâve been watching one for like five minutes now, and it just⦠stands.â
Another voice came on the commsâsomeone from Rennâs crew: âHey Renn, this one guy keeps pointing at my sandwich. Should I give it to him?â
Renn hissed. âNO, DONâT FEED THEM! You donât feed elite soldiers! Everyone knows thatâlike feeding a stray cat, theyâll never leave!â
Vermond muted the channel, leaned back in his chair, and smirked.
âYou think we should tell them?â Erie asked.
Vermond looked at the screen, where an elite undead calmly stared at Renn while another stood awkwardly beside a crate, still holding someoneâs sandwich.
âNah,â he said. âLet them believe in eye contacts.â
Kiana chuckled softly behind them. âHumans are fun.â
The halls of the undead destroyer hummed with eerie stillness as final preparations were underway. The recently-revealed elite undeadânow cloaked in the illusion of life with their helmets offâmoved like humans. Too perfectly. Too quietly. Their pale, motionless faces and pure white eyes made them look like mannequins left just a second too long in a nightmare.
Ruen stood near the center of the bridge, sweating, lips slightly parted as he struggled to make peace with what he was seeing. He turned slowly to Vermond, voice trembling.
âTheyâre⦠theyâre not wearing contacts, are they?â
âNo,â Vermond replied calmly, leaning against the console.
Erie nodded with wide eyes. âYeah, theyâre... people-shaped nightmares.â
Kiana sat elegantly on the couch, legs crossed, eyes observing Ruen like a cat watching a mouse wander too close. She tilted her head slightly. âYou agreed to be bait. You should not be this nervous.â
âI didnât agree because I wanted to!â Ruen snapped, then instantly shrunk under her gaze. ââ¦I agreed because you looked at me.â
âStill counts,â Erie whispered with a smirk.
Vermond ignored the banter. âYouâll wear the tracking beacon. Weâll drop you in one of their dead zones. Wait for the Folkan to pick you up. Weâll be watching. Listening. The moment they move you, we strike.â
Ruen sighed heavily, rubbing his temples. âI survived pirates, betrayal, and a collapsing Federation⦠and now Iâm being gift-wrapped for the undead horror cult.â
âTheyâre not a cult,â Kiana said softly. âTheyâre family.â
Ruen stared at her, pale. âYouâve got issues.â
Erie leaned in close to him and whispered, âYou have no idea.â
Just then, the old manâs voice cracked over the comms again. âI was walking past your elite fellas again. One of âem smiled at me. I think. Mightâve just been⦠facial twitching? Not sure. But they all standing like statues now, surrounding the hallway like it's a haunted art museum. I hate it here.â
Vermond gave a small smile. âTell them to clear the path.â
Seconds later, the hallway cleared.
Ruenâs eyes went wide. âThey⦠they heard him?â
âThey hear everything,â Vermond replied, his tone as cold as the void of space.
Everyone grew quiet.
Then Kiana broke the silence.
âDonât die out there, Ruen.â
Ruen chuckled nervously. âWasnât planning to. But thanks for the⦠encouragement?â
âGood,â she whispered with a subtle smile. âGo get them.â
Erie immediately held in a scream-laugh and turned around, clutching his mouth.
Ruen looked around, flustered. âI changed my mind. I donât wanna be bait.â
âYouâll be fine,â Vermond said, tossing him the beacon. âJust smile pretty for the monsters.â
And with that, the plan was in motion.
The laughter from the comms had died down. The old man, now quieter than before, adjusted his seat aboard the god-tier frigate. Despite the jokes, something felt... off. The elite soldiers Vermond brought on board werenât just âquiet professionals.â No one blinked. No one breathed heavily. Their helmets were down now, revealing faces too perfect, too still. White eyes stared forward, cold and empty.
Back on the destroyer, Vermond stood near the viewing platform, eyes locked onto the stars. He could feel the artifact now embedded deep in his chest pulse faintlyâlike a second heart, except this one beat to the rhythm of death itself. It had consumed the light-based artifact Ruen brought, and since then, the undead had changed. No longer grotesque or broken. They looked⦠alive. But they werenât.
Kiana stood near the entrance of the bridge, arms crossed, eyes dimly glowing. Erie was silent now, staring at a monitor, watching the remaining Federation fleets slowly lose ground in the battle above the atmosphere.
Vermond turned.
âWe move in twelve hours,â he said. âWhatever is left of the Federation will collapse soon.â
Erie nodded. âWe need that map. If the Folkan get to the outlaw sectors before we doâ¦â
âWe lose,â Vermond finished.
They had no time to waste.
Meanwhile, on the god-tier frigate, one of the elite undead slowly turned its head toward one of the seventeen crew members. Its mouth moved for the first time in days.
"May I help with the preparations?"
The man flinched. âY-You talked!â
The old man, standing by the table, narrowed his eyes. âYou⦠you guys are finally speaking, huh?â He leaned closer, muttering to himself. âPure white eyes⦠too perfect⦠must be some sort of high-end eye contacts. Tactical stealth model. Expensive ones, for sure.â
But deep down⦠the chill in his spine told a different story.
Hours passed.
The destroyer powered up. The god-tier frigate linked with it. Both ships prepared for a silent, coordinated jump.
The stars above flickered as more wreckage from the Federation fleet burned in orbit.
Ruen, now armored and standing beside Kiana, took a deep breath.
âI hope I donât die being bait,â he said quietly.
Kiana didnât answer. She simply walked ahead, her emerald-white eyes locking onto the screen.
From the distance, a signal echoed through the sectorâan encrypted transmission from a Folkan command ship, faint but traceable. Vermond raised his hand.
âWe follow it.â
They followed the encrypted Folkan transmission while cloaked. The god-tier frigate hovered beside the undead ship, both hidden in the black of space.
Vermond stood at the bridge, watching it all unfold in silence.
Kiana sat on the couch, casually sipping a drink no one could figure out the origin of.
Ruen stared at her, thoughts spiraling. He was the baitâpossibly living his final hoursâbut somehow, it felt worth it. All because of the girl who made him the bait. Blinded by her beauty, lost in his emotions.
They left the planet behind, the village below now forgotten.
Erie stepped beside Vermond and muttered, âIâm going to miss that place.â
Vermond patted him on the back. âAll you did was eat and scream.â
âHey, I did a lot of stuff,â Erie protested.
Just then, the comms crackled to life. The old man renn's voice came through: âHello? I think Iâm seeing somethingâships. A lot of them. They're firing at each other.â
The stolen Illegal Federation Map, the one worth a hundred million credits, beeped. One of its buttons turned red.
Kiana narrowed her eyes at it. Erie stepped in and pressed it.
The map shifted, transforming into an advanced radar display. Massive ships lit up on the screen, their sizes accurately shown.
âWhat in the voidâ¦â Erie whispered. âThis thingâs not just a map or a TVâitâs a damn ship radar!â
âNo wonder itâs worth hundreds of millions,â Vermond said, walking over.
Kiana sipped her drink, still lounging on the couch, watching.
Vermond called out, âRuen.â
Ruen approached.
âWhereâs your fleet?â Vermond asked.
Ruen pointed at two locations on the radar. âHere and here. Only some destroyer groups and one battleship remain⦠Theyâre fighting to the death.â His face was filled with regret.
âTheyâre outnumbered,â Erie noted grimly. âHow are we supposed to bait the enemy like this?â
Kiana finally stood.
Erie leaned toward Vermond and whispered, âHere comes your beautiful genius little sister.â
Kiana looked at them and spoke plainly: âSplit them. Create distractions.â Then she returned to her couch and resumed sipping her purple tea.
Vermond smiled. âRight. Divide and conquer.â
Erie tilted his head. âThatâs great and allâbut how do we actually fight them?â
Kiana looked at Vermond and smiled.
Vermond smiled back. âWeâre going back to the planet. Weâll split them up with distractions⦠then unleash our elite undead to tear them apart.â His voice was cold.
Erie sat down and looked at Ruen. âRemember, youâre the bait.â
Ruen hesitated, trembling slightly.
Then Kiana looked at him.
âI⦠Iâll do my best!â he stammered.
The formation began to shift. Vermond opened the comms, linking to the god-tier frigate.
The old manâs voice crackled through, sharp with tension. âWhatâs the planâHey! Quiet! Iâm speaking with Vermond. Our fleet commander is on the line.â
Vermond exhaled slowly. âWeâre transferring Ruen to your ship. Your crewâs now part of the bait.â
The line went silent.
ââ¦Bait?â the old man asked, his voice low, almost disbelieving.
Erie cut in, crisp and clear. âWeâre splitting the Folkan fleet. You run fast, get to the planet, draw their forward line in. Thatâs your role.â
Vermond picked it up from there. âMeanwhile, weâll broadcast a fake transmission targeting their flagshipâtheir battleship. While they scramble, Erie will contact the remnants of the Federation fleet. If we time it right, everyone converges on the planet. It becomes a kill zone.â
There was a pauseâbackground chatter, hushed voices on the frigateâs end, weighing risks.
Then the old man came back on.
ââ¦Copy that. Weâre in.â
The false broadcast began. Erie handled itâquick, clean, efficient. Within seconds, half the Folako/Folkan/Folanko fleet took the bait, redirecting course.
Vermond turned toward him. âWhat exactly did you broadcast?â
Erie grinned, smug. âRuenâs fake map. The one we talked about. Worked like a charm.â
Kiana gave him a long, unimpressed stareâlike she was watching a toddler celebrate a mistake.
Vermondâs tone dropped, cold and commanding. âErie⦠Ruen was supposed to handle that. His transmission was meant to draw them to the planet. Your job was to contact the remaining Federation forces for the ambush. We were going to arrive late with the elite undead for cleanup.â
Erie blinked, his expression frozen. âPlan B! Yes. This is⦠Plan B.â
Before anyone could respond, the illegal Federation map let out a sharp, warning beep. New warp signaturesâmassive. Not Folanko. Not Federation. Unknown.
The display lit up: a fleet under a notorious outlaw warlord.
And their command ship? Not a destroyer. Not a cruiser. Not even a battleship. A Titan. Big enough to rival a mothership. Its shadow loomed across the radar.
Then, a voice thundered over wide-band comms, deep and arrogant:
âTo all currently engaged in combatâsurrender your ships, your gear, your valuables⦠and your lives.â
Silence followed. On the couch, Kiana sipped her drink, deep in thought. Everyone else stared in stunned disbelief.
The old man voice burst through the comms. âWhat in the void was that?! A Titan-class?! Iâve seen a few in my dayâbut why here?!â
Ruenâs voice followed, grim and flat. âThe planâs gone. Our fleetâs going to be wiped out.â
Panic hovered over the roomâuntil Kiana spoke again, calm and radiant as ever.
âWe board that Titan. Use the elite undead. Their tech wonât compare. Their arrogance will.â
Everyone turned to her. Then to Vermond.
The old manâs voice came through again, this time more grounded. âSheâs right. ThoseâuhâElite⦠whatever they are, theyâre like elite mercs, yeah? Undying soldiers.â
Vermond looked at Kiana. Then nodded.
âSheâs right. And weâre out of time. No other option.â
The undead moved without commandâsilent, precise, like they knew. Rifles locked, energy shields lit. Shoulder energy shields plates deployed. Space suits sealed. Energy knifes sheathed. Secondary energy pistols ready. Knee guards clicked into place. Grenades secured. Vests tightened. Cameras activated. They were ready.
Vermond faced his team, voice steady, eyes hard.
âWeâre breaching that Titan. And weâre salvaging everything.â
Then⦠he felt it.
A call.
From the crown of the God of Death. From the Reaperâs sword. From the ring, the necklace, and the cloakâKianaâs cloak. Every artifact, every relic of the dead pulsed in sync.
Something was waking.
Something old.
As they prepared for the assault, Vermond placed the crown on his head. Instantly, his eyes blazed a dark emerald green. The number 109 flickered violently, pulsing with necrotic energy.
Power surged through him.
He slipped the ring onto his finger, fastened the necklace, and secured the Reaper blade at his belt. A strange clarity washed over himâhis body felt lighter, his mind sharper. The artifacts whispered in silence, feeding him strength beyond the living.
Kiana stepped close. Her expression softened, and without warning, she leaned in and kissed his cheek again.
Vermond blinked, then smiled faintly. âThatâs the second time youâve kissed me on the cheek, Kiana.â
She looked up at him. âBig brother should be more careful.â
From the side, Erie stood frozen, a spoon dropping from his hand with a loud clang. âYou twoâwhat the hell?! Youâre spoiling her too much!â
Vermond turned toward him, brows raised. âWhat are you talking about?â
Erie crossed his arms, flustered. âYouâre lucky. A beautiful sister like her, just kissing your cheek like that... ridiculous.â
Vermond chuckled. âYouâre just jealous, Erie.â
âShut up,â Erie muttered, turning away with a scowl.
Kiana reached up and unfastened her cloak. âBig brother needs this more than I do.â
Vermond immediately stopped her and wrapped the cloak back around her shoulders. âNo. Thatâs yours. And donât even think about undressing in front of meâor that pervert over there.â He pointed at Erie.
âHuh?! Hey!â
Kiana smiled, laughter dancing in her eyes. âHumans are so weird⦠and funny.â
The hangar doors of the undead destroyer opened slowly, soundless in the vacuum. The assault shuttle hovered just outside, its black hull blending into the void. Inside, the elite undead stood readyâsilent, weapons charged, visors dimmed. Vermond was among them, cloaked in shadow, his emerald eyes faint beneath the visor of his suit.
They were ghosts nowâno engine flares, no transmissions. Just a trail of death heading toward a titan.
Kiana stood near the exit ramp of the hangar, her long white hair flowing behind her in the filtered air. She didnât speak. She just watched her brother.
Two elite undead stood at her flanks like statues, armor heavier than the rest, bearing twin rifles and deployable shields. Their orders were unspoken: protect her with their body.
Vermond approached her one last time. âYou stay here. If anything goes wrong⦠you run.â
Kiana shook her head slightly. âIâll stay. But I wonât run.â
He hesitatedâthen placed a hand on her shoulder. âThen hold the line. Youâll know when to move.â
She nodded.
Erie stepped up beside Vermond, helmet sealed. âReady?â
Vermond turned, his voice like steel. âLetâs breach this titan.â
The shuttle slipped away, disappearing into the black.
Inside the destroyer, Kiana sat back in her chair, eyes locked on the radar. Her drink untouched. Her fingers hovered over the command console.
The comms cracked to life in Vermondâs helmet.
It was the old man aboard the cloaked god-tier frigate, his voice low, uncertain.
"Are you sure about this? We just stay here? No support, no fire, nothing?"
Vermond stared out into the black void. The massive silhouette of the titan loomed ahead, its sheer size blotting out stars.
"Yes," he replied coldly. "Stay cloaked. If we fail, you're our last chance to run. If we succeed... youâll know when to move."
There was silence. Then a resigned sigh.
"Understood, Commander."
The first capsule launched.
A sleek, silent bullet of reinforced alloy, no engine flare, no signal. It glided through space like a hunterâs bladeâundetectable.
Then another.
And another.
Soon, dozens filled the darknessâan entire wave of boarding capsules, drifting toward the titan from all directions like a swarm of invisible predators.
A hundred elite undead.
Each wearing a black suit. Each outfitted with silent, magnetic boots, energy shields on the other hand, rifles locked to their chests, energy knifes at their sides, grenades ready, bags ready for looting, everything is ready.
Their cameras were active.
Inside the destroyer, Kiana sat alone in the darkened command deck. Two armored undead stood behind herâstill, watchful.
The main screen flickered to life.
One by one, the helmet feeds appeared. A hundred silent viewpoints. Walls. Ducts. Hull plating. The titanâs massive shape surrounding them.
They were inside.
Each team had entered from a different sectionâsome through maintenance shafts, others through armor gashes or cooling vents, their capsule doors melting away without a sound.
No words were spoken. Only the subtle red glow of emergency lights within the titan. The enemy had no idea.
Vermond stood among one of the breach teams. Unlike the rest, he bore no cloakâhis dark suit exposed, the glow of the reaper blade at his hip faint but steady.
He looked up as the final seal blew open.
Inside the titanâs interior was vast metalâa maze of halls, war rooms, reactors, weapon stations, crew quarters. And they were crawling into all of it.
Vermond raised two fingers.
His squad moved.
Kiana, still watching, leaned forward. Her green eyes narrowed. Every camera feed showed the same thing:
Silence. Precision. Total infiltration.
She whispered under her breath.
"Big brother..."
Inside the titan.
âDid you hear the announcement earlier?â one of the crewmen grunted, adjusting the thick collar of his padded suit. He leaned against the railing, a worn energy rifle slung lazily over his shoulder.
The other crewman scoffed, sipping from a steaming ration flask. âAbout surrender or die? Yeah. Real diplomatic. Like anyoneâs actually gonna give up when weâre carrying a damn titan.â
âExactly!â the first chuckled. âThey see this beast and scatter. Thatâs how it always goes. Just point the guns, and watch the galaxy run.â
A low hum echoed through the corridor.
The second crewman frowned, holding up a hand. âYou hear that?â
The lights overhead flickered.
Thenâsilence.
The hum returnedâcloser now. Wrong. Not the ship. Movement.
Thenâ
Crash!
A nearby ventilation grate exploded open, sending shrapnel across the corridor. Both men spun aroundârifles raised.
Too late.
A black armored shape dropped from the ceiling, slammed onto the floor with a thud, and drove a knife through the first crewmanâs chest before he could scream.
The second fired wildlyâbolts streaked through the hallâbut the figure blurred, moved with inhuman speed. One shotâdirect to the helmet. The crewmanâs body crumpled instantly.
More vents burst open.
Five more undead dropped into the corridor.
Their vests gleamed under the red emergency lighting. Rifles raised. No words. No hesitation.
Somewhere deeper in the titanâan alarm finally sounded.
âBREACH DETECTED. MULTIPLEââ
ââSECTOR TWELVE, SECTOR FOURTEEN, SECTORââ
ââALL SECURITY UNITS RESPONDââ
Inside the destroyer, Kiana watched across dozens of feeds. Muzzle flashes flared like lightning in the dark. Blood sprayed. The titanâs soldiers scrambledâconfused, uncoordinated, outnumbered before they even understood what hit them.
Kiana leaned back slowly, eyes locked on the screen.
âGood,â she whispered.
On one feed, Vermond stepped into a control room, slicing through a guard mid-turn, then fired twice into the ceiling to send sparks raining down.
He wasnât hiding anymore.
He was leading.
They were deep inside the titanâs main control room now.
A dozen crewmen stood in front of themâarmed, panicked, unprepared.
The five elite undead flanking Vermond stepped forward without a word, forming a tight shield wall around him. Their heavy energy shields locked in place, rifles aimed over the top with ruthless precision.
The enemy opened fire.
Blasts of plasma slammed into the shield wall, crackling and sparking, but the undead formation heldâunmoving, disciplined. Thenâ
Return fire.
In perfect sync, the elite undead fired a salvo of bolts, cutting through the crew like paper. One of them lobbed an energy grenadeâdetonation.
The room fell silent.
Smoldering. Empty. Nothing left standing.
Vermondâs eyes flickered.
109 became 121.
Erie stepped up beside him, brushing dust off his jacket. âVoid damn. That was worth every credit back on Black Spire,â he said, grinning.
Vermond said nothing. He moved forward slowly, absorbing the silence, the stillness. But something felt⦠different.
Lighter.
His steps didnât feel normal. Was it the Reaper at his belt? The Crown? The Necklace? The Ring?
He couldnât tell.
Then it hit himâhe forgot something.
He tapped the comms. âKiana. The boots and the belt from the Death Godâtake them. Theyâre yours now.â
A pause.
Then her voice came through, warm, steady. âOkay, big brother.â
Erie side-eyed Vermond, leaned in, and whispered, âI thought you were saving the belt for meâ¦â
Vermond didnât even turn. âI never said anything.â
Erie let out a dry breath, muttering, âUnbelievable.â
They attempted to operate the titanâs control systems, but the earlier blast from the energy grenade had left much of the console fried and unresponsive. Sparks danced across ruined panels; several monitors remained black.
âDamn,â Erie muttered, tapping on a dead screen. âI think we overkilled this room.â
Vermond said nothing. He moved to the side, eyes scanning for anything useful.
Then Kianaâs voice came through the comms, clear and calm.
âBig brother, thereâs a keyâright beside the control desk.â
Vermond paused, looked, and sure enoughâthere it was, tucked into a small panel slot on the side of the console.
He picked it up and asked, âHow did you know that was here?â
âUndead camera feed,â she answered sweetly. âIâve been watching everything.â
Vermond turned the key in his fingers, a faint smile crossing his face.
âThanks, Kiana.â
On the destroyer, Kiana smiled quietly, clutching her hands to her chest. Her brotherâs gratitude was warm.
Erie clapped his hands together. âYou better protect that sister of yoursânot only is she more beautiful than a goddess, sheâs a genius and cool as hell!â
Vermond didnât even glance back. âShut up and follow me.â
Erie grumbled, trailing behind. âAlright, alright⦠getting serious now. Whatâs that key for anyway?â
Vermondâs eyes narrowed, a small grin forming as he walked toward the titanâs interior.
âA vault,â he said.
âLetâs go salvage something priceless.â
They moved swiftly through the dim corridors toward the titanâs vault. The massive structure of the warship groaned around them, distant alarms echoing through the metal.
Erie glanced at Vermond. âHow do you even know the vaultâs in this direction?â
Without slowing, Vermond replied, âKianaâs guiding me.â
Erie furrowed his brow. âThen how does she knoââ
Before he could finish, their comms crackled to life.
âVermond? Commander? Are you there?â
The old manâs voice came through, laced with static and tension.
âIâm here,â Vermond answered.
âThe Federation and the Folkan⦠theyâve stopped fighting. But now theyâre turning toward the titan.â
Erie scoffed. âWhat are they, muscleheads? They could just retreat. The titanâs massive, but itâs slow as hell.â
The old man snorted. âYouâre the musclehead.â
âHuh?!â Erieâs voice shot back, clearly annoyed.
The old man chuckled through the comms. âThe titanâs not alone. Itâs got destroyers, cruisers, and a full escort. Who the hellâs dumb enough to turn their back and run? Thatâs how you get blasted in the rear.â
Erie huffed. âWell⦠me! Why not?!â
Before it could escalate further, Vermond cut in, calm but firm.
âEnough. Keep your eyes on the battle. Let me know the moment something changes.â
The old man sighed. âAlright, weâll keep watchââ
Then a shout behind him.
âShut the hell up!â
His voice faded, and the comms went silent again.
Back on the destroyer, Kiana sat quietly on the couch, sipping her drink. Her emerald eyes stayed locked on the screens, tracking the undead cameras with precision.
Vermond and Erie finally reached the titanâs vault. The door loomed before themâthick, towering, sealed shut with reinforced plating.
âWeâre here,â Vermond said, scanning the doorâs surface.
âWhere do we even put that key?â Erie asked, tilting his head.
Kianaâs voice entered the comms again, smooth and clear.
âBig brother, thereâs a hidden key slotâon the right side of the vault door.â
Vermond walked over, found the panel, and inserted the key.
âThanks again, Kiana.â
Back on the ship, Kiana smiled softly. Her eyes flickered with green light as she leaned forward, focused.
Erie watched Vermond and muttered, âHow does she always know this stuff?â
Vermond smirked. âYou said it yourselfâsheâs a genius.â
âOh⦠right.â Erie scratched his head. âStill creepy.â
With a low click, the key sank into the hidden slot. A quiet hum followed, like the vault itself was awakening from a long slumber.
ThenâTHUNK.
Massive mechanical locks deep within the door began to disengage, one by one, echoing like thunder in the tight corridor. The ground beneath them trembled faintly as hydraulics groaned to life.
Erie stepped back. âThatâs a good sign, right?â
The door split slightly in the center, light seeping out from the cracksâcold, pale, and artificial. Steam hissed from vents along the edges, and with a heavy grind, the two massive panels began to part, revealing the vault's interior.
Inside was a chamber lined with relicsâarmored suits sealed in display capsules, crates stamped with warlord insignias, alien tech humming faintly, and weapons too advanced for their time.
Erie whistled, stunned. âHoly hellâ¦â
Vermond stepped forward slowly, his eyes scanning everything. But thenâhis gaze fixed on something at the far end of the vault.
There, resting atop a dark pedestal, was a long, coffin-like box covered in engraved symbols. Unlike the others, it pulsed faintly with an eerie black glow. The Reaper sword at his side vibratedâalmost like it was reacting.
Kianaâs voice came through again, quieter this time.
âBig brother⦠something in there feels wrong.â
Vermond narrowed his eyes. âI feel it too.â
Erie looked at him. âYou want to open that thing, donât you?â
ââ¦Yeah.â
"But before we touch that coffinâ¦" Vermond said calmly, his voice low and focused. "Letâs grab everything else we can first."
Without needing a command, fifty elite undead moved in, bags open, hands precise. They swept through the vault like silent shadows, collecting every artifact, weapon, and valuable piece of tech they could carry. Strange devices with glowing cores, alien weaponry marked with symbols long lost to history, and relics from forgotten warsâall vanished into their bags.
Elsewhere in the titan, more undead continued their diversion, sowing chaos to keep Vermond and Erie hidden in the shadows.
Erie grabbed one of the undeadsâ bags, his eyes practically sparkling.
"Vermond! Letâs get the powerful-looking, expensive ones!" he said with a boyish grin.
Vermond smirked. âYouâre like a child in a candy store, Erie. But donât worryâI already planned for that.â
The two joined the effort, Erie snatching up advanced tech with gleeful greed while the undead focused on gathering the more arcane itemsâthe kind Vermond could use. He, too, moved with purpose, selecting the artifacts that called to his strange power.
Minutes passed. The vault, though ransacked, still brimmed with treasure.
"If I brought bigger bags," Erie muttered, eyeing the untouched loot, "I couldâve cleaned out the whole vault."
Vermond didnât respond. His attention was pulled to the far end of the chamber. The coffin.
As he stepped toward it, a pulse echoed through his chestâcoming from the orb inside him. His eyes flickered, the number 121 shimmering for a second, as if sensing what lay within.
Kianaâs voice broke in softly through the comms.
âBe careful, big brotherâ¦â Her voice was light, almost teasing, but there was a strange, knowing smile on her lips. Like she sensed what was about to happen.
Vermond approached the coffin, the air around it thick and still. Erie stood beside him, staring at the ominous box in silence.
Vermond slowly began to open the coffin, inch by inch. The grinding sound of metal echoed through the vault. Around him, the elite undead silently slung their treasure-filled bags over their backs, then raised their rifles and activated energy shields, forming a silent perimeter.
Erie leaned forward, eyes wide with curiosity.
âWhatâs inside? Let me see!â
The lid groaned open fully. Insideâresting atop dark velvetâwas an orb. But unlike the one within Vermond, this orb pulsed with pure, radiant light. No shadow, no corruptionâonly warmth, life, and clarity.
âThe oppositeâ¦â Vermond whispered.
Kianaâs voice came through the comms, soft and steady.
âBig brother⦠try to touch it,â she said, a small smile on her lips, watching through the undead's cameras.
Vermond reached out. The moment his fingers grazed the orb, searing pain shot through him. He gasped, staggering back, blood spilling from his mouth.
âVermond!â Erie shouted, but didnât moveâfrozen by what he saw.
The glowing orb rose from the coffin and hovered in front of Vermondâs chest. Then, in one fluid motion, it surged forwardâmerging into his body where his original orb rested.
Vermondâs body jolted as if struck by lightning. His eyes snapped open.
On his left, dark emerald light pulsedâflickering the number 121. On his right, a radiant light emerald glow matched itâ121 as well.
Erie stared, stunned.
âHoly⦠What am I witnessing?!â
It was as if light and darkness had found balance inside him. Two forces once at odds, now fused within a single being.
âI can feel⦠something strange,â Vermond murmured.
In that instant, the crown, the reaper, the necklace, and the ringâall glowed brightly before dissolving into motes of light and shadow, fusing into him. His power surged. Images flashed through his mindâon one side, the grim, skeletal form of the death god⦠and on the other, a serene, radiant goddess cloaked in celestial light.
Vermond stepped forward, the vault shaking slightly under his presence.
His voice echoed, layeredâone divine, the other dark.
âErie.â
Erie flinched. âVermond⦠your voiceâ¦â
From the destroyer, Kiana watched the screen, eyes wide. A smile touched her lipsâand a faint blush colored her cheeks, as if seeing a piece of her brother she hadnât known was missing⦠now complete.
Vermondâs glowing eyes dimmed. He stumbled, his voice low but firm.
âLeave the titan⦠immediatelyâ¦â
Then, his body gave out. He collapsed.
Without hesitation, the elite undead reactedâno orders needed. One stepped forward, hoisting Vermond onto its back, while the others formed a moving shield wall. Erie fell in beside them, his breath sharp as he activated his rifle.
The comms crackled.
âVermond! I think you guys should retreat!â the old man shouted. âThe Federation and Folkanâbothâare closing in on the titan!â
âWeâre already doing that!â Erie snapped, sweat running down his temple.
Kianaâs voice cut in calmly, directing them through the chaos.
âGo right. Then left near the control room. Keep straight until the armory room, then take a hard left.â
Following her instructions, they moved fastâdodging fallen debris and broken lights. Alarms were beginning to echo through the titan.
The massive vault had been close to their boarding pointâluck was still with them.
Undead units were already scattering, slipping into capsules one after another, their heavy bags packed with artifacts and stolen tech. The destroyerâs stealth systems were still holding.
âThere! The capsule!â Erie shouted.
The elite didnât replyâthey just ran faster. Reaching the capsule, they loaded Vermond in first. Erie followed, panting. The last undead stood outside, watching them.
Then, he did something unexpected.
He turned toward the rushing titan crewâand didnât move to enter.
âWhat are you doing?! Get in here!â Erie yelled.
The undead looked back at Vermond, unconscious in the pod.
âIt was my pleasure to serve the Necromancer King,â he said, voice hollow and resolute. âOr should I say⦠the young god of life and death.â
"What the void?!"
Then he turned again, activated his energy shield, and charged into the oncoming enemy.
âDamn it!â Erie slammed a fist against the side of the capsule. âThere was still time!â
As the pod launched, Erie looked at Vermond, lying still beside him, power still pulsing faintly through his veins.
âWhat the hell just happened to you, Vermondâ¦â
The capsules roared through the void, streaking away from the titan like comets tearing across space. Inside, Erie held onto the side rail, one eye on Vermondâs still form, the other on the rapidly approaching destroyer.
âCome onâ¦â he muttered.
Then suddenlyâlight.
A pulse shimmered across the void. From the side of the god-tier frigate, which had remained cloaked in the shadowsâunmoving, silentâsomething activated.
A vast arc of golden energy bloomed from its side, stretching like a celestial wing.
A long-range energy shieldâpale yellow, powerfulâspread out, expanding like a protective dome that reached over and around the destroyer.
âWhat theâ?â Erie blinked. âDid⦠did that frigate just⦠react?â
The energy surrounded them. As the capsules pierced through, the shield solidified behind them like a closing gate. Enemy fire from afar fizzled harmlessly on its surface, redirected or absorbed by the immense energy lattice.
Inside the destroyer, Kiana stood from her seat as screens flared to life. She watched the incoming pods.
âTheyâre almost hereâ¦â she whispered, her hands trembling with relief.
The hangar bay doors slid open with precision. One by one, the capsules landed and hissed open. Undead poured out, bags clutched tight, many of them wounded, but none stopping.
Erie jumped out, dragging Vermond with him. âGet a medical pod! Now!â
Kiana ran to them, her eyes locked on her brother. âBig brotherâ¦â
Vermond was unconscious, but his presence felt⦠different. Power still radiated off of himâboth divine and unholy.
Kiana placed a hand on his chest. The orb inside pulsed softly, flickering with light and darkness.
Behind them, the final capsule closed as the last Undead returned. The destroyer sealed itself.
Outside, the god-tier frigate remained silent and still, but its shield held strongâlike it had recognized something⦠or someone.
Outside, the Federation and Folkan forces unleashed hellfire on the titan, their combined barrage lighting up space. The Folkan fleet that had been lured away earlier by Erie now returned, flanking the titanâs defense line. As explosions rocked the void, the Folkan called in reinforcementsâthis was war at full scale.
Minutes ticked by.
Inside the destroyerâs medical bay, Vermondâs eyes finally fluttered open. His vision cleared slowly, revealing a familiar face above himâKiana. Her green eyes shimmered softly, and she smiled down at him, her beauty as radiant as ever.
He was resting on her lap.
âGood to see you alive,â came Erieâs voice from the corner. He was munching on something suspicious-looking, probably stolen from a ration kit. âYouâve been out for years, by the way.â
Vermond blinked. âWait⦠years?â
Erie smirked. âNah. Just a few minutes. Wanted to see if your brain still works.â
Vermond tried to sit up, but his body wouldnât respond. He felt nothingâno pain, no warmth, just emptiness. Like his soul was still drifting somewhere in deep space.
âIâm glad youâre awake, big brother,â Kiana said warmly, brushing his hair back gently.
Erie, still chewing, whispered to himself, âDamn⦠sheâs way too hot.â
Kiana turned her head slightly. Sheâd heard him.
Erie froze. âW-what?â
But instead of a glare, Kiana smiled sweetly at him. âThank you for protecting my brother.â
âIâit wasnât me, really,â Erie stammered. âThe undead handled most of itâ¦â
Suddenly, the comms crackled to life. The old manâs voice filled the room.
âI donât know what the hell happened, but the god-tier frigateâs shielding us and the destroyer. Some idiot pressed something, and now itâs playing guardian angel.â
All eyes turned to the view outsideâthe massive titan being pummeled by Federation and Folkan forces working in sync, their differences forgotten in the face of mutual fear.
Then Ruenâs voice came over the comms, quieter this time. âVermond⦠all of you⦠thank you. Even if I was just bait, I know you tried to help us. But thereâs nothing we can do now. Theyâre fighting at full strength.â
Vermond exhaled softly. âThen we wait. Let them tear each other apart⦠and once itâs overâwe salvage.â
Erie leaned closer to the console. âHey, Ruen⦠you still loyal to the Federation?â
There was a pause.
âNot anymore,â Ruen replied, voice solemn. âOur sectorâs been wiped out by the Folkan. Our mothership is gone. Whatâs left of our fleet is dying out there.â
Erie nodded. âThen join us.â
ââ¦Wait, really?â Ruen asked, disbelief in his tone.
Vermond smiled faintly, still resting on Kianaâs lap. âRuen⦠welcome aboard.â
Over the comms, Ruen let out a choked sound, and the old manâs voice cut in, grumbling, âOh for crying out loud. Calm down! Donât cry on the damn radio!â
Ruenâs voice returned, trembling. âIâm just⦠Iâll get to see that beautiful goddess every day nowâ¦â
Erie narrowed his eyes, glancing at Kiana, then at Vermond. âShould I poke his eyes out?â
Vermond sighed, eyes half-lidded. âLet him dream.â
Then somewhere in the dark again, the watcher smiled, not because he's amuse nor satisfied, but because a new god arouse.
Hours passed, and the battle still raged on outside. The sector was in chaosâreinforcements from the Folkan Empire had arrived in full force, joining the carnage. Moments later, the warlordâs fleet tore through the void, warping in with terrifying precision. The clash between giants showed no signs of stopping.
Inside the destroyer, things were quieter⦠and stranger.
Erie leaned against the wall, arms crossed, watching the feed of the battle. âDamn. They're still at it.â
He turned his headâand froze. Kiana was sitting beside Vermond, carefully feeding him with a spoon.
Erie blinked. âWhat the void are you two doing?!â
Kiana glanced up at him, unbothered. Erie immediately looked away, face flushed. âYâyou're as beautiful as everâ¦â
Kiana gave a soft, warm smile. âThank you, Erie.â
Blood trickled from Erieâs nose. He quickly turned away, flustered. Vermond just stared at him, disbelief in his eyes.
ââ¦What?â Erie asked.
âHm,â Vermond replied, unimpressed.
Kiana still wore her cloak, the one infused with strange energy. Around her waist, the belt gifted by the death god shimmered faintly, the boots still there. It hadn't faded nor consumed by Vermond's orb. Perhaps⦠because Vermond and Kiana were no longer ordinary.
Vermondâs voice was quiet as he spoke again. âI saw something⦠strange. The death godâIâve seen him before. But the other one⦠the one bathed in lightâ¦â
Erie, still munching on his food, replied through a mouthful, âThat undead, before he sacrificed himself, said something weird⦠âThe Young God,â I think.â
Vermond frowned slightly, repeating the phrase. âThe Young Godâ¦?â
Kiana smiled faintly at that. Vermond noticed it⦠but didnât ask.
Suddenly, the comms crackled.
The old manâs voice came through, half-exasperated. âI swear, this warâs never gonna end.â
As the battle roared on beyond their cloaked destroyer, Erie rummaged through one of the crates and pulled out a blueprintâVermondâs old prize from the Black Spire Station, the one he stole from a Federation Engineer.
He waved it casually. âAlright, Iâm bored. Letâs talk about this space station youâve been dreaming of.â
Vermond, still resting on Kianaâs lap, glanced over lazily. âItâll take billions of credits... but with those unknown crystals in our cargoâand the loot we salvaged from that titanâI think weâre close.â
Kiana gently fed him another spoonful as Vermond spoke, her touch calm and precise.
Erie, still slightly red in the face from Kianaâs presence, raised a brow. âSo⦠if we could build it now, where would we place it?â
âSomewhere resourceful,â Vermond replied simply, eyes half-lidded.
Erie sat back, thinking aloud. âYeah⦠a resource-rich area. We could manufacture ships, expand the fleet, maybe even create a full-blown undead armada.â
His gaze shifted to one of the elite undead standing silently in the roomâits skin flawless, almost human. No heartbeat. No breath.
Erie tilted his head. âActually⦠calling them âundeadâ doesnât feel right anymore. They look too human. Iâm gonna call them... ânon-breathing humans.ââ
Laughter suddenly erupted through the comms.
âYou're really as much of a muscle-head as a dumb horse,â the old man cackled from the god-tier frigate.
Erieâs eye twitched. âShut the void up, you crusty old fossil.â
âOh, I see, trying to bait me now, huh? Nice try, kid. I'm too mature for that.â
âThat wasnât a trick, you dusty noodle! You're the real muscle-head here!â
âWhat the hell did this brat just say?!â
Their heated nonsense was cut short as the battlefield lit upâone of the Folkan command battleships erupted in flames, splitting apart in the void.
The remaining Federation fleet, now leaderless, attempted to flee. Most didnât make it. Only their battleship, and one destroyer managed to warp out in time.
More Folkan reinforcements warped in. The warlordâs forces, despite their strength, were being pushed backâslowly, but surely.
Erie leaned forward, still munching some mystery snack. âLooks like itâs almost over.â
The battlefield beyond the cloaked destroyer had become a tempest of fire and shattered steel. Massive hulls cracked open like ancient bones, their pieces drifting silently through the void. Folkan reinforcements surged forward, their warships unleashing volleys of golden plasma that tore through the black with brutal precision.
The warlordâs fleet, once proud and vicious, fought on with bloodied resolve. Their titan were scarred and smoking, their hulls barely holding togetherâbut they fired to the last. For every Folkan ship they destroyed, two more slipped in from the fold, relentless and fresh.
Erie leaned over the console, eyes locked on the shifting war map. âThe warlordâs forces are falling back. No... theyâre not just outnumberedâtheyâre outmatched.â
The old manâs voice crackled through the comms. âTheyâre retreating?â
âTrying to,â Vermond answered quietly. âBut the Folkan arenât letting them.â
A sudden bloom of fire lit up the screenâa warlord supercruiser exploded, its core breached under concentrated fire. The shockwave scattered nearby wreckage like dust in the wind.
The old man spoke again, his tone heavy. âItâs over. The warlord's finished. A handful of ships are trying to jump out⦠but most wonât make it.â
A long silence followed.
Vermond, still resting on Kianaâs lap, whispered, âSo this is war⦠when youâre watching from the shadows.â
Kiana gently brushed a strand of hair from his forehead, her smile soft. âBig brother should rest.â
Then the sensors pinged. A wide-range broadcast echoed across the sectorâFolkan command.
But it wasnât a warning. It was a claim.
âThis sector is now under Folkan authority. All remaining forces are to surrender or face total annihilation.â
Erie folded his arms, scowling. âTch. Now they're annexing outlaw territory? How about the salvage?â
Vermondâs light-filled and darkened eyes flickered. âLet them. For now. Weâve already taken what we came for.â
Kiana nodded, her voice like a breeze. âBig brother is right.â
As the Folkan fleet spread like a net across the shattered remains of war, the cloaked undead destroyer and the god-tier frigate slipped away, silent and unseen.
A shadow retreating beneath the light.
As the cloaked destroyer drifted deeper into outlaw territory, the god-tier frigate in the distance buzzed with chaotic life.
"Hey! You dumb void-brained idiot, stop pressing random buttons!" the old man shouted over the comms, his voice echoing through the ship.
"Relax, old man! Nothing badâs gonna happen," came the casual reply from one of the younger crew.
Then, with a low rumble, the entire frigate began to shift.
Panels folded, armor plates slid into new positions, and the sleek frigate reformedâits entire structure morphing into the shape of a colossal railgun.
The old man roared. "What have you done!?"
Back aboard the destroyer, Erie blinked at the display. âUh... Vermond? The frigateâs... changing. Itâs turning into a massive cannon?!â
The comms crackled again. The old manâs voice came through, laced with fury. âOne of these void-damned Like Erie fools touched something again, and now this frigateâs a damn artillery piece!â
âWhat?!â Erie exclaimed, scandalized. âYou damn greezer!â
Still resting on Kianaâs lap, Vermond tilted his head slightly, watching the transformation. âThatâs... something new. And powerful.â
Then, Vermondâs thoughts sharpened. Itâs going to rotate...
And right on cue, the frigate began to turnâaligning with a nearby asteroid.
A heartbeat later, the railgun fired.
A monstrous beam of compressed darkness erupted from its barrel, obliterating the asteroid in a single shot. Space rippled with the aftermath.
âHoly void!â Erie yelled, wide-eyed. âThat thing could vaporize a battleship!â
Vermond focused again, wondering if it could fire a second timeâbut nothing happened.
Then the old manâs voice crackled back on, this time laced with awe. âThe hell was that? Thereâs a countdown on the screen nowâ1,500 seconds. Itâs got a cooldown!â
Vermond nodded slowly. âPowerful, but too slow for sustained fleet battles.â
Kiana smiled as she fed him another bite. âBig brother is really cool.â
Vermond, for once, blushed faintly.
Erie, watching from the corner, squinted at them... feeling something twist in his gut.
He muttered under his breath. ââ¦Should I poke my own eyes?â
As the hum of the obliterated asteroid faded from their screens, a thick silence settled over the bridgeâuntil Vermond finally broke it.
âWe need a place to trade,â he said quietly, his voice low, eyes half-lidded with exhaustion. âSomewhere that doesnât ask questions.â
Erie raised a brow. âYou mean an outlaw trading station?â
Vermond nodded. âWeâre low on synth fuel. The artifacts we took from the titan... we can sell them. Quietly. Cleanly.â
The comms crackled as the old manâs voice cut in, now sharper, more serious. âHeh. I know just the place.â
Erie leaned forward, intrigued. âYou do?â
âOf course I do, you muscle-headed void-eater,â the old man snapped. âYou think Iâve survived this long without knowing where to fence stolen goods?â
He cleared his throat. âPull up the black-sector nav chart.â
Erie tapped the Illegal Federation Map, and a dark holographic projection shimmered into lifeâan outlaw map of the fragmented zones beyond empires reach. Red pathways blinked against a sea of dead stars and fractured moons.
âThere,â the old man said, tracing from his end. âThatâs Jurnakâs Maw. Hidden behind a shattered moon, guarded by mercs whoâll gut you for breathing wrong. But if you broadcast the right transponder signal... they let you in.â
Erie gave a low whistle. âSounds like a trap.â
âIt is a trap,â the old man chuckled. âThe trick is not acting like prey.â
Erie zoomed into the route. Dense fields of wreckage and collapsed asteroid belts painted a narrow maze across the map.
âThere are three passageways,â the old man continued. âIf we cloak and follow this oneâ we reach it unnoticed.â
Vermond nodded. âThen we move.â
Kiana looked down at him, concern in her eyes. âShouldnât big brother rest?â
Vermondâs gaze sharpened. âIâll rest after we sell what we stole, Kiana. And after we grow stronger.â
She gave a gentle smile. âThen Iâll watch over you until then.â
Erie grinned, already imagining it. âAn outlaw station... weird tech, shady people, and black market deals. Sounds like a party.â
The old manâs laughter echoed through the comms. âJust donât blink too slow, boy. Everything there bites.â
With silent grace, the cloaked destroyer and the god-tier frigate arced into motionâdrifting through the starless void toward a haven of shadows, treachery, and opportunity.