They drifted steadily toward Jurnakâs Maw, the stars growing sparse as wreckage and debris fields thickened around them. Inside the destroyer, the bridge was calm, the hum of the cloaking field pulsing like a heartbeat beneath their feet.
Vermond, now able to walk again, stood at the center of the bridge. His expression was cold and composed, the weight of command fully back on his shoulders.
Then the comms crackled.
âStop! Stop the damn thing!â a voice shouted.
A moment of static, and thenâ
âThis is Ruenâuhh... this old man here wants to solo the comms again.â
âGive me that!â the old manâs voice barked in the background. âThis is my turf, you bastard!â
Kiana, lounging on the couch as usual with a warm drink in her hands, stared silently out the viewport, listening to the chaos echoing from the god-tier frigate.
At the control panel, Erie tapped a few keys, speaking calmly. âRuen, just let the old man have it. Heâs the one guiding us through this mess.â
The old manâs voice immediately cut through. âSee?! Even that muscle-brain knows! Hand over the comms!â
Ruen groaned. âOkay, okay! Fine!â
A beat of silence passed before the comms stabilized again. The old manâs voice returned, more composedâbarely.
âApologies. These bastards are more annoying than a plasma leech in your helmet.â
Vermond spoke next, his tone as cold as ever. âAbout the station⦠is there an auction house?â
The old man grunted. âYes. Like I saidâyouâll find everything there. Black market tech, rare parts, slaves, smugglers... whatever filth youâre looking for.â
A faint smile crept onto Vermondâs face. âGood. Weâll auction the unknown crystals in the cargo holdâmaybe even some of the titanâs loot.â
Erie groaned between bites of something crunchy. âHere we go again. You remember when we sold off that cleanser? Miss those simple times.â
âDonât worry,â Vermond said darkly. âWeâll catch more. After we sell this haul.â
From the couch, Kiana watched them quietly. Her green eyes gleamed as she caught the smirks forming between her brother and Erie.
Those cold, mischievous grins.
Planning something again.
Something dangerous.
Something... profitable.
Vermond sat down beside Kiana, his expression calm as the hum of the bridge continued around them. Kiana leaned in slightly, sniffed onceâand wrinkled her nose.
âBig brother smells stinky,â she said with a gentle, honest smile.
Erie, mid-bite, froze. His eyes widened. âHâYou... Wâwell...â
And then he burst into laughter.
Vermond turned slowly, picking up a wrench beside him without a word.
Erieâs laughter caught in his throat. âIâI was just thinking about something else! Yeah! About... the time we auctioned the cleanser! Together! Remember that?â
Vermond sighed, defeated, and stood up. âThank you for the reminder, Kiana. Iâm going to take a shower.â His voice was dead serious, and his pride clearly wounded.
Kiana reached out, patting his head. âDonât worry, big brother. Even if you smell dirty... or like poop... Iâll still hug you tightly like this.â
She wrapped her arms around him.
Vermond smiled gently, returning the hug. âThank you, Kiana.â
As they pulled apart, Kiana cast a quiet glance at Erieâone filled with deadly intent.
Erie froze in place, eyes darting away as he cleared his throat. âI-I didnât say anything, alright?!â
Vermond turned and leftâbut then stopped, a realization hitting him.
The undead destroyer... didnât have a bathroom.
With a blank stare, he stripped off his upper suit and pulled on a pair of clean pants. Shirtless now, he returned to the bridge, towel slung over his shoulder.
As he stepped in, one of the elite undeadâthe non-breathing humansâwas standing silently in the corner. Upon seeing Vermond, it immediately stepped aside, respectfully making way.
Erie turned to say somethingâand froze, the snack in his hand falling to the floor.
âVermond... your bodyâwhat the void? Did you train in secret or something?!â
Only now did Vermond glance down, properly noticing his reflection on a console panel.
He was lean, muscularâdefined abs, chiseled arms, his physique honed and perfect. Not overly bulky, just... sharp, powerful, and graceful.
Kiana, still on the couch, blushed faintly, smiling. âBig brotherâs body is beautiful. Really handsome.â
Vermond gave a soft smile. âThank you, Kiana.â
Erie looked down at his own stomach. Round. Soft. Full of snacks. âDamnit. I really need to catch up...â
Then the old manâs voice came through the comms, snapping them back to focus.
âWeâre almost at the warp point. Brace yourselvesâwe're diving straight into the Maw.â
The comms crackled.
âWeâre dropping out in three... two... one.â
With a thunderous hum and a flash of twisted light, the cloaked destroyer and its god-tier escort exited warp.
Before them loomed a shattered moon, torn apart ages ago by orbital bombardments. Its jagged remains orbited in slow death, broken plates of ancient stone and steel drifting in silent agony. Behind itânestled deep in the shadowsâwas Jurnakâs Maw.
It wasnât a station. It was a graveyard turned fortress. Old ships, scavenged hulls, and broken titans had been welded together into a massive, living sprawl of outlaw machinery. Docking ports blinked with rusted lights. Hidden turrets tracked unseen targets. Cargo haulers drifted between shadowy corridors of twisted hulls.
Kiana stepped up beside Vermond. âBig brother, so thatâs the Maw...â
Erie whistled from the controls. âLooks like a scrapyard for gods.â
The old manâs voice came through, proud. âSheâs ugly, and sheâll try to kill you if you donât speak her language. But for those who know how to walk these decksâsheâs paradise.â
âSending the transponder now,â Ruen muttered from the frigate. A beat passed. âWeâre cleared for entry. Docking bay twelve.â
The destroyer steered forward. Slowly, cautiously, the massive cloaked vessel slipped into the debris field, hiding between carcasses of forgotten ships.
Erie scanned the monitors. âTch. Look at thatâmercenary ships, pirate rigs, even some Federation deserters. Everyone's here.â
Vermond narrowed his eyes. âDo you think theyâll recognize us?â
The Old man's voice crackled through the comms. âIf they do, theyâll pretend they didnât. Thatâs how the Maw survives.â
As they approached the docking bay, massive gates opened like the maw of some ancient beast. Lights flickered red and yellow. Smoke drifted through the hangarâs broken ventilation systems.
They touched down with a soft metallic thud.
âWeâre in,â Erie said, spinning his chair. âWhat now?â
Vermond stood still for a moment. Then: âWe bring out the cargo. The crystals. The artifacts from the titan. And we find the auctioneer.â
Erie looked at him. âAnd if someone tries to take it?â
Vermond smiled faintly, the glow in his eyes returning. âThen we remind them what we are.â
The crew gatheredâsilent, focusedâas the cargo bay hissed open and the blackened wind of Jurnakâs Maw swept through their ship.
Welcome to the underworld.
The elite undeadâNon-breathing humans, fully geared and silent, began moving without a single wordâintent on unloading the cargo from the cloaked destroyer. But then, they froze mid-step.
Vermond raised a hand. âHold. Weâre exploring first. I want eyes on the place before we start moving anything.â
Erie stretched his shoulders and smirked. âFinally, something fun.â
Kiana remained quiet. Her cloak was up, hood drawn low over her face to conceal her features. Even in a place like this, beauty drew attentionâand attention here meant trouble.
The god-tier frigateâs ramp lowered with a hiss, and out came Ruen and the old man. The former looked annoyed. The latter, smug.
âThe rest of the crewâs locked inside,â the old man said casually. âI rigged the door. Nobodyâs leaving the ship without my say.â
Ruen shot him a look. âThis old manâs a damn psychopath.â
Vermond glanced at them both, then nodded. âGood. Weâve halted the operation. For now, we walk. Old man Rennâlead the way.â
A grin spread across the old manâs face, crooked and weathered. âTrust me... this place will creep you out.â
He turned toward the rusted gates of Jurnakâs Maw, smoke curling from vents above as distant sounds of shouting, laughter, and malfunctioning machinery echoed through the stationâs bones.
Together, they stepped forwardâinto a world of shadows, where every corner held a secret... and every deal came with a blade behind the back.
Their footsteps echoed against the metal floors as they entered.
Vermond walked at the front, his eyes sharp. Kiana stayed close behind him, her cloak drawn tight. She didnât speak, but her eyes darted from corner to corner, watching every movement, every shadow.
Ruen muttered, âThis place gives me the creeps...â
âGood,â Old man Renn said, grinning as he led them deeper in. âThat means itâs working.â
They passed by thick steel doors with strange markingsâmakeshift shops, private rooms, auction chambers. A mutant with four mechanical arms sold illegal implants from a rusted stall. A group of mercenaries with bloodstained armor argued over credits in a corner. A broken Federation bot limped past them, mumbling in corrupted speech.
Erie tilted his head at a floating cage holding what looked like a half-alive creature humming with tech. âWhat the actual void...?â
âDonât look too long,â Renn said. âIf it stares back, youâve already lost.â
They moved on, down a wide hallway lit by red emergency lights. A huge wall screen crackled with static before flickering into a black market menuââLIVE AUCTIONS TONIGHT â RARE TECH, BIOWEAPONS, LOST ARTIFACTS.â
Vermond stopped to stare. His gaze narrowed. âThatâs our window.â
Erie crossed his arms. âThink theyâll bite on those unknown crystals?â
âTheyâll bite,â Vermond said. âBut theyâll try to take a chunk of our hands with them.â
Kiana tugged gently on Vermondâs sleeve. He looked back at her. She didnât say anythingâjust pointed toward a side corridor where a robed figure had been watching them, unmoving.
But when they turned fully to look... the figure was gone.
Vermond nodded once. âKeep your eyes open. Weâre being marked already.â
Renn let out a low chuckle. âWelcome to the Maw.â
They continued deeper into the Mawâs twisted halls, weaving through crowds of smugglers, mercs, and shadowy traders. After a while, they found a quiet corner behind a broken vendor stall, where flickering neon signs barely reached.
They sat down, backs to the wall, weapons nearbyâjust in case.
Erie leaned forward, chewing on something again. âLook at those people over there.â
They followed his gaze. Across the corridor, a group of silent figures stood in chains, collars blinking with red lights. Their eyes were hollow, skin bruised and worn. Some looked too young. Too small.
Old man Renn exhaled sharply. âSlaves. Theyâll be auctioned soon. Just another product in this pit.â
Vermondâs eyes darkened. âThis place is worse than I imagined.â
Trying to sound composed, Ruen crossed his arms and looked off into the crowd, glancing sideways to check if Kiana was listening. âWe should stay resilient. Keep our guard up.â
Erie raised a brow and clapped sarcastically. âWow. Oscar-worthy performance.â
Ruen immediately dropped his head, muttering under his breath.
Then Kianaâs quiet voice broke the silence. âBig brotherâ¦â
Vermond turned toward her. She didnât say anything elseâjust subtly pointed.
The robed figure was there again, standing just beyond the crowd, half-hidden behind a flickering ad screen. Watching them.
Vermondâs gaze locked with it.
But like before, it vanished into the shadows the moment he tried to focus.
Old man Renn leaned back, one hand on the hilt of his hidden blade. âLooks like someoneâs taken an interest in us.â
Vermond said nothing, his expression unreadable. But beneath the cold mask, the gears were already turning.
They werenât just visitors here.
They were being huntedâor tested.
Vermond stood without a word.
Kiana glanced up at him, her hood still low. She didnât speak, but he caught the slight nod. She had seen it too.
Erie stood next, brushing crumbs off his coat. âWe moving?â
âSomeoneâs watching us,â Vermond said quietly. âIâm not letting that slide.â
Old man Renn smirked, staying seated. âYou go do that. Iâll hold your seats.â
Ruen shuffled beside Kiana awkwardly, then followed behind Erie.
They crossed the corridor, slipping between shady stalls and swaying banners of illegal syndicates. The crowds were thick, but not loudâthis place didnât believe in chaos. It believed in silence with knives behind backs.
Vermond paused at the corner where the robed figure had last been seen.
Then he turned sharply into a narrow alley, motioning with two fingers.
Kiana followed without hesitation, her steps light as mist.
The alley bent into darkness. And there, at the far end, stood the robed figure againâtall, unmoving. Its face still obscured in shadow beneath a smooth, metallic hood.
It spoke first, its voice distorted. âChild of soulfire. Weâve watched your rise.â
Vermondâs eyes narrowed. âAnd I donât like being watched.â
The figure tilted its head. âThen stop shining so brightly in the dark.â
Kianaâs hand hovered near her sidearm. She didnât draw it, not yet.
âYouâre not Federation,â Vermond said coldly. âNot Folkan either. Who are you?â
The figure took a single step forward. âWe are the ones who remember. And we know what you carry inside.â
Vermondâs expression remained unreadable. âThen speak plainly before I lose interest.â
The figure paused⦠then extended a black-gloved hand. Inside its palm was a shardâsimilar to the necrotic crystals Vermond had found in the Titan wreck.
It pulsed.
"Remember the person who gave you the triangle crystal? That's us. And remember, More will come for you,â the figure said. âYou are not alone. But you are not safe.â
Then, like smoke, the figure dissolvedâvanishing without a trace, leaving only the pulsing shard behind on the ground.
Kiana stepped forward and picked it up carefully, her green eyes flickering as it hummed in her palm, smiling faintly.
âBig brother,â she said softly, âthis shard... it's calling you.â
Vermond took it from her hand. His eyes flashedâjust faintlyâas he felt the whisper of a soul trapped within.
He turned back toward the corridor, his voice low.
âLetâs go. This place just got more interesting.â
A commotion broke out just as Vermond and Kiana returned from the alley. Erie was in the middle of itâlocked in a fistfight with a smuggler, surrounded by a growing crowd.
Old man Renn threw his hands up. âThis muscle-headâs a damn magnet for trouble!â
âYes, I am,â Erie grunted, dodging a punch. âBut he started it! Spit on my boots while I was eating!â
Ruen tried to pull him back. âCalm down, you idiot!â
The smuggler laughed, wiping blood from his lip. âYeah? You suck, little void-eater.â
Erieâs eye twitched.
Then he lunged.
The smuggler dodged and landed a sharp blow to Erieâs gut, knocking him back a step. âToo weak,â he taunted. âGo cry to your captain.â
Erie smiled.
And thenâwhooshâhe whipped out a spoon from his coat and jabbed it right into the smugglerâs backside.
The man howled in pain, staggering forward.
Erie followed up with a brutal flurry of punches to the face, sending him to the ground in a groaning heap.
Vermond stepped forward and grabbed Erieâs wrist, voice cold and calm. âThatâs enough. Eyes are already on us.â
As if on cue, a group pushed through the crowd. Most were armed. One, with a scarred face and too many gold teeth, glared down at the scene.
âBoss,â one of them growled. âThese rats just attacked one of ours.â
The ugly man cracked his knuckles, eyeing Vermondâs crew.
âYou just made yourselves real popular in the Maw.â
Kiana, still hooded, didnât say a word. But her hand subtly moved to her side.
Vermondâs eyes dimmed slightly, his expression unreadable.
Old man Renn sighed. âWell... so much for laying low.â
The crowd thickened, voices rising with curiosity and excitement.
âHey! A fightâs breaking out over there!â someone shouted.
The smuggler gang laughed cruelly, pointing at Vermondâs crew.
âLook at these weaklings,â one sneered. âBarely worth the trouble.â
Ruen muttered under his breath, eyes narrowing. âTch. This is why I canât stand outlaws.â
Then, a sudden flash of movementâsomeone from the crowd hurled a piece of rotten fruit. It flew straight at Kiana.
The hood of her cloak slipped back, revealing her face.
Her white hair shimmered under the stationâs artificial lights. Her skin pale, flawless. And her emerald eyesâpiercing, radiantâcut through the crowd like a blade of light.
Time seemed to freeze.
Erieâs gaze flicked to Vermond.
His fists were clenched. His jaw locked. His body trembled slightlyânot from fear, but fury.
âUh⦠Vermondâ¦â Erie whispered. âCalm down...?â
One of the smugglers stared at Kiana, dumbstruck. âVoid... sheâs beautifulâ¦â
Then their leader stepped forward, eyes wide and hungry. âI want her. Bring her to me!â he barked, pointing at Kiana.
The crowd shifted, focusing all attention on her.
A smuggler stepped toward her.
ThenâVermondâs eyes changed.
His left eye shimmered a pale, glacial emerald. The right one deepened into a dark, consuming green. The number: 121.
A tremor ran through the station.
One of the smugglers hesitated. âWhat was thatâ¦?â
The narrative has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the infringement.
âProbably the reactor acting up,â another muttered, unsure.
Erie glanced at Vermondâand froze.
Ruen backed away, swallowing hard.
Even Old Man Renn exhaled softly. âNow thatâs newâ¦â
As the smuggler reached for Kiana, she smiled gently.
Like she already knew what was coming.
ThenâVermondâs voice boomed.
It echoed through the hall, not loud, but everywhere. A sound that felt both divine and demonic, like something speaking from across eternity.
âDonât you dare.â
The smugglers froze.
Even the crowd took a step back.
Vermond walked forward, slow, controlledâlike death itself taking form.
âDonât you dare touch my sister,â he said again, voice like thunder wrapped in silk.
The air thickened with energy. The floor pulsed faintly beneath their feet.
The smuggler leader stumbled back, eyes wide.
âWhat the void is happening...?â someone whispered in the back of the crowd.
Nobody dared move.
And in the center, Kiana sat calmly, still smilingâquiet and untouched, like a goddess watching her celestials protect her.
Silence gripped the hall.
The smuggler who had reached for Kiana stepped backâhands raised, face pale. His leader, trembling now, tried to regain control of the situation, but his voice cracked.
âW-We didnât mean anything by it,â he stammered. âJust... just a misunderstanding!â
Vermond didnât answer. His glowing eyes bore into them, unmoving.
The leader swallowed, then snapped his fingers toward one of his lackeys. âGet the crates.â
The smuggler hesitated. âBoss... our goods?â
âNow,â the leader barked, his voice shaking.
A few moments later, they dragged forward three sealed crates, dropping them with heavy thuds onto the ground.
âRare tech,â the leader said quickly. âIllicit cores, black-market rations, even a few Federation-grade stimulants. A gift. An apology. We... we didnât know who you were.â
Vermond still said nothing. He simply stared.
Then finallyâhe blinked.
âGood,â he said quietly.
Erie stepped forward, whistling low as he inspected the crates. âWell damn. We should get insulted more often.â
Kiana lowered her hood again, hiding her face once more. Quietly, she moved to stand beside her brother.
Ruen nudged the smuggler leader. âYou're lucky heâs in a good mood.â
The smuggler nodded rapidly. âY-Yeah. No hard feelings, right?â
Vermond took a step forward.
The leader flinchedâbut Vermond only picked up one of the crates effortlessly with one hand.
His voice was low and icy. âNext time, choose your targets more carefully.â
âYes, yes of courseâabsolutely,â the smuggler nodded frantically.
Old Man Renn stepped in, chuckling. âI told you this place would creep you out. Seems like itâs the other way around now.â
Erie grinned, holding up a strange-looking device from one of the crates. âThis oneâs illegal in twelve sectors. I love this place already.â
Vermond turned, walking away with the crates. Kiana followed beside him, silent as ever.
Behind them, the crowd slowly dispersedâwhispers growing, rumors already spreading about the quiet girl with emerald eyes... and the boy whose voice could shake a station.
Vermond turned to the group. âHead back to the destroyer,â he ordered calmly. Then, to Ruen and Old Man Renn, he added, âBring the other two crates. Load them into the frigate.â
They moved without question.
As they walked through the corridors of the station, faint murmurs followed them. People whispered as Vermond passed.
âDid you see him earlier?â one man said, eyes wide. âHis voiceâit shook the station.â
âDonât be ridiculous,â another scoffed. âNo one can do that. It was probably the reactor or something.â
âBut it happenedâI felt itââ
Despite the protests, most dismissed the story as nonsense. The ones who saw it with their own eyes exchanged glances, their words dying in their throats. The memory of what happened lingered in silence, already becoming a myth, whispered and quickly forgotten.
Back at the destroyer, the elite undead silently emerged as the group returned. Ruen, Erie, and Old Man Renn handed off the crates.
Old Man Renn scratched his beard and muttered, âSilent as ever.â
Without a single word from Vermond, the elite undead hauled the crates into the frigate with mechanical precision.
Erie, now more relaxed, leaned toward Vermond. âSooo⦠we heading to the auction now?â
Vermond gave a small nod. âThatâs the plan. Iâve seen what I needed.â
Then suddenly, Kiana took his hand without warning, gently pulling him toward the destroyer. Vermond blinked in surpriseâbefore she rose on her toes and softly bit his ear again.
âBig brother was super cool out there earlier,â she whispered, her cheeks tinged pink.
A small, genuine smile broke across Vermondâs face. He placed a hand on her head, gently patting it. âIâll protect you. No matter what.â
Kiana smiled back at him, eyes brightâlike she had known, all along, that this moment would come.
They made their way to the bridge. Old Man Renn and Ruen returned to the frigate, while Erieâunsurprisinglyâwas already munching on something again. Kiana quietly settled into her usual spot on the couch, pulling her cloak slightly tighter. Vermond tapped into the comms.
The old man's voice crackled through. âVermond, these bastards opened the crates.â
A voice in the background shouted, âHey! Check this out! Isnât this some kind of advanced ship system tech?!â
âI know,â Vermond replied calmly.
The elite undeadâthose strange, human-like figures without breathâstood still at the edge of the bridge, unmoving, their camera-like eyes focused silently on everything.
Old Man Rennâs voice came through again. âOh, and I almost forgotâyouâll want to bring those elite mercs of yours into the auction for protection.â
Erie raised an eyebrow. âWhy? Is it that bad in there?â
Renn chuckled darkly. âWeâre in the Maw. You guard your own goods, or you lose them. No one else will care.â
Ruen spoke next, his voice clear beside Renn's. âWhatâs the plan?â
Vermondâs tone sharpened. âWe bring five undead. Each will carry different items. We're keeping a low profile. No full display of strengthâtoo risky.â
Erie paused. âWhat about the dark crystal we got from the God of Death?â
Vermond looked over. âThatâll be the first item. And weâre only auctioning a small portion.â
âWhy just a little?â Erie asked.
The old man cut in with a snort. âTo keep the price high, you muscle-head. Make it rare, mysterious. Supply and demand.â
Vermond turned toward Kiana. âKiana, do you want to come with us to the auction, or stay here?â
She glanced up from under her hood, her voice soft. âI want to be beside big brother. Always.â
Erie glanced at the two of them, groaning. âI swear, one of these days, Iâm poking my eyes out.â
Minutes later, the hangar bay inside the undead destroyer hissed open with a low, echoing groan. The five elite undead, their forms eerily still and efficient, stepped forward without a word. Each one was already equipped with reinforced exo-packs to carry valuable cargo.
Vermond stood at the edge of the platform, arms crossed, eyes watching every detail. âErie, Ruenâhelp them sort the crates. Only the ones with the marked tags.â
âOn it,â Erie said, brushing crumbs off his jacket as he moved.
âGot it,â Ruen added, already scanning the crate markings.
The elite undead moved like shadows, lifting heavy containers with unnatural ease. One picked up the case filled with polished alien tech. Another took a crate holding rare salvage from the Titan's Vault. A third lifted a sealed lockbox containing unidentified energy cores, then the fourth one picked up a small portion of the unknown dark crystal humming with a low pulse.
Kiana stood nearby, her cloak draped over her form, hood up. She stayed silent, her emerald eyes quietly watching the process. She held onto Vermondâs arm gently, saying nothing.
Vermond glanced down at her and gave a small nod before looking at the rest. âLeave the dark crystal sealed. The others stays until the final round. Erie, double-check its containment lock.â
âYeah, yeah,â Erie replied, walking up to it and tapping the seal with a scanner. âStill tight. Still creepy.â
Old Man Rennâs voice buzzed through the comms. âWeâve secured the external cargo route. Youâre clear to move out when ready.â
Ruen loaded the last of the selected crates onto a levitating hauler, then stretched. âThatâs it. All prepped.â
Vermond gave one last look at the lineup, then turned toward the exit. âWe move carefully. No flash, no threats. Just business.â
The five undead stood behind him like statues, silent sentinels.
Kiana followed quietly, staying beside Vermond as always, her presence calm and constant.
âLetâs get this done,â Vermond said, his voice low.
They exited the destroyer, heading toward the auction floor.
As they approached the auction hall, dozens of eyes turned to watch them. The five elite undead marched in formation, clad in black suits and full tactical gear, each carrying a sealed crate. Vermond walked at the front with Kiana beside him, while Erie and Ruen followed close behind.
Erie muttered, âYeah⦠low profile, alright,â as he stuffed another alien snack into his mouth.
The hall buzzed with whispers and dim conversation, thick with the scent of alien spices and tension. Smugglers, mercenaries, and shady traders packed the room, their eyes flicking toward the stage and the mysterious group entering.
Vermond and his entourage moved through the crowd like a blade through mist. People shifted away, intimidated by the silent undead and the aura of cold control surrounding Vermond.
Erie snorted. âThis place smells like someone boiled a dead lizard in old boots.â
âShut up,â Vermond said without looking.
Beside him, Kiana clung lightly to his sleeve. Her emerald eyes scanned the crowd, quiet and observant. She tugged at his arm gently. âBig brother,â she said softly, âSomeoneâs staring at you again.â
Vermond smirked, his tone dry. âGood. Let them.â
At the stage, the auctioneerâa lanky, twitchy alien with a crooked smileâspotted them and hesitated. His eye lingered too long on Kianaâs face before he remembered himself and straightened.
âAh! Welcome, esteemed guests!â he croaked, voice cracking under pressure. âToday we offer the rarest artifacts and tech this side of the Maw! Letâs begin with our first item!â
Vermond stepped forward, placing a datapad on the platform. A hologram flickered to life. One of the undead rolled a crate forward with a soft hiss. As it opened, an eerie, pulsing light spilled out.
Gasps echoed.
The dark crystal floated within, humming with otherworldly energy. Its glow cast flickering shadows on the stunned crowd.
The auctioneer stammered. âWh-What⦠what is that?â
Vermondâs voice cut through the silence like a blade. âThe Dark Crystal. Itâs worth seven million credits. And a crate of high-grade provisions.â
Murmurs broke out.
One smuggler whispered, âThat thing could power a whole fleetâ¦â
Another added, âOr destroy one.â
Erie casually bit into his snack. âMight raise the dead too. Who knows?â
A voice rang out from the crowd. âFive million credits!â
Erie scoffed. âCheap.â
Vermond didnât blink. âSeven million. Now.â
The auctioneer hesitated, then began his count. âSeven millionâgoing onceââ
A deep voice boomed from the back. A massive, armored smuggler pushed forward. âEight million! I want it.â
Vermondâs tone remained ice-cold. âEight million and provisions. Nothing less.â
The crowd murmured nervously.
The auctioneer fidgeted, clearly overwhelmed. âW-Well⦠we can settle for seven million if the foodâs goodââ
Erie facepalmed. âYouâre unbelievable.â
Ruen leaned close to Vermond. âMaybe we just take the eight and walk.â
Vermondâs eyes glowed faintly. âPatience.â
Then Erie stepped forward dramatically, hand on his hip. âWe could always go somewhere elseâfind better buyers.â
The crowd groaned.
The auctioneer sighed, then relented. âFine. Eight million and the food. Deal.â
Erie grinned at Vermond. âTold you.â
As the transaction finalized, more eyes turned on the five elite undeadsâNone-breathing Human. One smuggler whispered, âThose guys⦠they move like Federation black ops.â
The auctioneer smiled shakily. âA historic sale, folks! Truly one for the books!â
Vermond turned to Kiana. Before she could speak, he gently placed a hand on her shoulder. âLetâs get out of here.â
Erie, while munching something again, turned to Vermond. "What about the other crates we brought for auction?"
Vermond then replied. "We'll skip into' that for now."
The elite undead reformed around them, crates in hand.
Erie lifted the food crate over his shoulder, dripping with green juice. âBest auction ever. Got credits. Got food. Got weird stares. Perfect.â
They returned to the undead destroyer, the hulking vessel looming beside the sleek god-tier frigate. The five elite undead silently offloaded the crates of alien food into the destroyer's cargo hold. Ruen peeled away and headed back to the frigate.
Inside the destroyerâs dim interior, Kiana settled into her usual spot on the couch. Vermond sat beside her, resting a calm hand on her shoulder.
The comms crackled to life.
The old man's voice came through, surprised. âWell... that was fast. What did you guys get?â
Erie leaned back, grinning. âEight million credits. And a crate of food.â
There was a pause. Then: âT-That many?!â
âItâs a dark crystal,â Erie replied casually, picking something out of his teeth.
Vermond spoke next, voice calm, fingers still resting on Kianaâs shoulder. âThe artifacts we salvaged from the Titanâs vault⦠weâll auction those next. Slowly.â
Erie glanced between the two on the couch, then groaned. âWhy are you two getting closer every day? I know you're siblings butâseriouslyâIâm gonna poke my eyes out soon.â
âYouâre just jealous,â Vermond said, not even looking at him.
âShut up.â
Meanwhile, the undead moved like clockwork, wordless and efficient. They began preparing the next set of cargoâartifacts salvaged from the Vault of the Warlordâs Titan.
Erie scratched his head. âSo... what do we price these things at?â
Vermond replied, eyes still calm, his voice steady. âTen million credits. Each.â
Erie almost choked on the fruit he was chewing. âTen mil?!â
Vermond didnât flinch. âWe grind slowly. Let the hype over the dark crystal grow. When that peaksâthen we sell the bigger stuff. That includes the illegal Federation map.â
Erie whistled low. âSo we're talking, what⦠a hundred million in the long run?â
The comms buzzed again, Ruenâs voice cutting through. âYou might want to check outsideâ¦â
Vermond stood, eyes narrowing. He and Erie moved toward the shipâs viewing screen.
Outsideâgathered just beyond the destroyerâs rampâwas a crowd of smugglers. Armed. Watching.
Waiting.
Erie leaned in slightly, eyes sharpening. âWell... looks like omnious.â
Vermondâs eyes flickered faintly.
âLet them come,â he said coldly. âWe still have plenty of dead to feed.â
"Wait.. your undeads can now devour people?!" Erie choked.
"Shut up."
The docking bay outside the undead destroyer pulsed with tension. Over two dozen smugglers had gathered, forming a loose half-circle around the ramp. Some leaned on crates, feigning nonchalance. Others clutched rifles and pulse pistols, eyes sharp, fingers twitching. There was no mistaking itâthey came expecting blood.
Erie whistled low. âThatâs not exactly a welcome party.â
Ruenâs voice crackled through the comms. âTheyâre loaded. At least four high-energy signatures. One of themâs got a fusion blade.â
Vermond stood at the top of the ramp, flanked by two elite undead. Towering in black armor, the breathless sentinels loomed behind himâwhite-eyed, unmoving. The air grew still around them, as if the destroyer itself were waiting.
Kiana stood a step behind him, silent. Her green eyes scanned the smugglers, unreadable.
Vermond took a step forward.
The smugglers flinched.
From the center of the crowd, a heavily tattooed smuggler with a chrome jaw stepped out. âYou sold a dark crystal. We saw the energy spike from half the station.â
Another shouted, âYou donât just drop power like that in a place like this and expect no fallout!â
âAnd now youâre sitting on more?â someone else barked. âWe want in!â
Vermond didnât answer. The silence stretched, heavy and deliberate. Thenâ
âNo.â
A single word, cold and final. It cracked through the tension like a shot.
The smugglers shifted. Someone raised their weapon.
Erie stepped up beside Vermond, cracking his neck. âWelp. Here we go.â
The instant the weapon clicked, the undead moved.
A blurâone elite undead surged forward, seizing the nearest smuggler by the throat. No time to scream. Just a wet snap of bone.
122.
Panic tore through the group.
Blaster fire erupted. Blue plasma bolts screamed toward the rampâonly to fizzle out against a shimmering barrier. Another undead raised its arm, shielding the group with an energy shields. It hurled a plasma grenade into the crowd.
A concussive pulse detonated across the bay.
Half the smugglers dropped instantly. The others scattered in terror, weapons clattering to the ground.
Vermond descended the ramp, calm, each step echoing through the stunned silence.
âYou thought you could take from me?â His voice was low, steady. âRemember this moment. I let you live.â
The chrome-jawed smuggler staggered back, eyes wide. âThis isnât over!â he spat before vanishing into the smoke.
Vermond turned to Erie. âCheck the bodies. See if they dropped anything useful.â
Erie scratched his head, surveying the unconscious figures. âHuh. Not bad for an auction after-party.â
Behind them, Kiana watched, still silent.
Vermond glanced her way, then forward again. âNext time... they wonât get to run.â
The destroyerâs ramp began to close.
Inside, the undead reset their formation, still and ready.
Outside, the docking bay fell quiet once moreâemptied of noise, and full of fear.
Inside the destroyer, the low hum of engines thrummed beneath their feet. Crates were secured. Artifacts locked behind reinforced shielding. The undead stood like statuesâsilent, breathless, waiting.
Erie dropped a small pouch on the table with a metallic clink. âCouple of credit chips, a rusted plasma knife, and⦠this.â He held up a thin black cardâorganic-looking, etched with glowing red symbols that pulsed faintly. âLooks like some kind of encrypted access key.â
Vermondâs gaze narrowed. âFederation?â
Erie shook his head. âFederation cards are blue and white. This⦠this is something else. Feels tied to the station.â
He slid the card into a console port. The screen flickered, static buzzing through the air. Then a strange language scrolled across itâalien symbols, flickering redâand a low voice rumbled from the speakers:
âAccess verified. Retrieving lost signal from the âââââ core.â
Everyone froze.
Erie blinked. â...The what now?â
Vermond leaned closer, eyes gleaming. âInteresting.â
A map projected from the consoleâa hidden layout beneath the stationâs surface. A pulsing red point marked something deep within.
âA smugglerâs den?â Erie muttered.
âNo,â Vermond said softly. âA secret base. Weâre raiding it.â
Before anyone could speak, Ruen's voice crackled through the comms, low and urgent. âHeads up. We've got more company inbound.â
Vermond straightened from the console, his tone ice-cold. âRaise the shields.â
Kiana stepped beside him, voice quiet but steady. âBig brother⦠Someone strong is approaching. I can feel it.â
Vermondâs silence spoke volumes. Then, calmly: âWeâve been marked.â
A shape emerged on the external camsâa hooded figure drifting toward the ship, silent as shadow. In its hand: a curved energy blade, humming with lethal promise.
Its eyes never blinked.
The comms crackled again with the old manâs grim voice: âSeems like the maw put a bounty on us.â
The docking ramp groaned as it opened, exhaling a hiss of steam like the breath of some ancient beast.
Fog poured out in curling tendrils, licking the cold station floor beneath stuttering lights. And in the heart of that haze⦠the bounty hunter stood.
Motionless.
Wrapped in shadow-drenched black, a jagged energy blade pulsing in one hand. The weapon flickered like it wanted to scream. The matte visor on his helmet reflected nothingâjust darkness, empty and bottomless.
Inside the destroyer, the air thickenedâcold, electric, still.
Vermond stepped out.
Alone.
He walked forward like a whisper wearing a body. His boots barely echoed on the ramp. Behind him, two elite undead emergedâsilent, soulless. Their glowing white eyes stared ahead, unblinking. They didnât breathe.
The bounty hunter raised his bladeâno words.
Vermondâs lips curledânot in anger, but something worse.
Curiosity.
âYou came for the crates?â he asked, voice low, like a prayer. âYouâll leave with nothing.â
No warning. The hunter lunged.
A flash of steel and hate.
The blade came down like a guillotine. One undead stepped inâand was split in half, clean through. The other opened fire, its rounds hammering the hunter backâbut the man didnât fall. He slid, turned, and threw a spike straight into the undeadâs eye.
It didn't even flinch.
The bounty hunter froze, breath caught.
âWhat the hellââ
Vermond tilted his head, like studying a bug trying to crawl away.
âHow is it still standingâ¦?â the hunter whispered.
Vermond smiled. Slowly. Too slowly.
âYou donât kill whatâs already dead.â
He lifted a hand.
And the shadows listened.
They surged up like black roots, coiling around his arms, his boots, his throat. His eyes flaredâone green, one dark, and both completely wrong. Empty and glowing.
âYour soul,â he whispered, âwill scream inside my orb forever.â
The hunter roared and chargedâfast, desperate. His blade moved like lightning.
But Vermond didnât move.
The undead did.
A second elite caught the strike mid-swing. Sparks howled. The hallway cracked under the pressure. The hunter ducked, spun, came in lowâhe was good. Too good.
But thenâ
A whistle.
Soft. Delicate.
Vermondâs lips barely moved.
Then the ramp erupted.
A wall of undead crashed into the sceneâdozens, then hundredsâblack armor, white eyes, rifles gleaming. The hunter stumbled back, eyes wide behind the cracked visor. He could barely speak.
âWhat the hell is thisâ¦â
Vermondâs tone dropped to a whisper, sharp enough to cut bone.
âThis,â he said, âis your grave.â
The bounty hunter charged one last time, a final, frenzied lungeâ
âand the undead opened fire.
Plasma tore through the air, hundreds of rounds at once. The hunter twisted, danced through the first volleyâbut the second hit.
And the third.
And the fourth.
He jerked, spasmedâshredded by precision fire. Limbs twitched. Blood sprayed. A groan choked through his throat as he dropped to his knees, sparks flickering from torn armor.
Still alive.
Barely.
Vermond stepped forward. Slowly. Carefully.
He crouched in front of the dying man and studied himâlike someone admiring broken art.
âYou were paid to kill me,â he whispered. âTell your clientâoh. You can't, can you?â His grin widened, sharp and eerie. âBut donât worry. Iâll find them. Iâll thank them... personally.â
He stood.
And nodded once.
A final shot punched into the hunterâs chest.
The body arched.
Then crumpled.
Vermond watched, unmoving, as the light left the manâs eye.
123.
His own eyes shimmeredâcounting the soul.
Behind him, the undead returned to formation like nothing happened.
Kiana appeared in the entryway, her face soft, calm⦠blushing faintly as her gaze lingered on her brother.
Erie stood near the shadows, hand shaking slightly.
âI⦠I didnât know you had that in you,â he muttered.
Vermond didnât look back.
He just stared down at the body, eyes unreadable.
Then he turned to the console.
The map still glowed. The next targetâwaiting.
His voice, when it came, was colder than before.
"I won't let them steal our treasures. That base is next.â
The comms crackled, distorted for a secondâthen the old manâs voice came through, low and rough.
âDamn,â he muttered. âI didnât know our commander was that ruthless.â
Erie swallowed. âMe⦠tooâ¦â
Back inside the ship, Kiana sat curled on the couch, eyes locked on Vermond through the live feed. A soft blush crept into her cheeks. She smiledâgentle, almost dreamy.
Vermond didnât look back. His voice came cold and flat through the channel.
âWeâre infiltrating the base. Bring everyone from the frigate. Weâve been spoiling them too much.â
The old man barked back immediately, voice sharp and energized. âYou heard him?! Gear up! We move now!â
Erie hesitated, voice tighter this time. âAre you sure about thisâ¦? They might⦠die.â
âThey wonât die,â Vermond said. Not hope. Not faith. Just certaintyâlike death itself had already told him.
Then Ruenâs voice broke in through the static. âVermond⦠someone found a crate here. Small pistol. Black metal. Feels like itâs humming with something wrong.â
âGood,â Vermond replied. âTheyâll use that.â
Outside, the air grew heavier.
Twenty elite undead stood at the readyâmotionless, waiting like statues of war. A moment later, the sixteen crewmembers from the god-tier frigate arrived, gathering in tight formation. With them stood the old man Renn and Ruen, both holding those strange dark pistols.
The atmosphere shimmered like something ancient was waking up.
Inside, Vermond turned to Kiana.
âYouâll stay here,â he said, voice softer but still distant.
Kiana smiled like she expected that. âOkay, big brother,â she said, warmth lacing her words. âIâll just watch everything⦠through the live feed.â
But before he could walk past her, she suddenly stepped close, rose on her toesâand bit his ear again, lightly.
Then whispered:
âStay safe, big brother.â
Vermondâs eyes flickered, just for a second.
Erie stared from the side, deadpan. âI swear to the void⦠Iâll really poke my eyes out.â
The frigate crew lined up beside the elite undeadârifles shaking in human hands, steady in dead ones. The corridor to the smugglersâ den was dark, stained, humming with foul energy.
Thenâ
Bang.
The first shot screamed through the hallway.
Chaos erupted.
Smoke exploded. Alarms shrieked. The undead surged in, silent and brutal. The crew followed, boots pounding on metal, dark pistols spitting violet bursts of energy that hissed through armor like acid.
His eyes flickered: 126.
A smuggler screamedâcut short by the elite undead's knife.
And again: 127.
Erie ducked behind a pipe as plasma fire zipped past his face. âBang bangâthis is not what I signed up for!â
Vermond moved like a ghost. One hand raised, shadows swirling around him. His voice was ice. âPush forward.â
The elite undead tore through the corridor. One smuggler tried to fleeâhis body was tossed like paper.
And again: 128.
From behind, a crewman yelled in pain. Renn turned and caught him before he collapsed.
âMedic! We need a damn medic!â
âHeâs not dead!â Vermond growled from ahead. âKeep moving!â
Blood smeared the floor. The hallway lit up with strobing red, a siren warping overhead. Gunfire rattled like thunder.
Then again: 132.
Then, deeper inâa massive storage room.
Metal crates, stacked high.
âClear it!â Erie shouted, wiping grime off his visor.
An undead crashed through the locked container. Inside: gleaming metals, preserved rations, sealed nutrient bars, weapon parts, salvage tech.
Twelve crates in all.
âFood,â Renn breathed, grinning through sweat. âAnd shiny things.â
The undead didnât pause. They started moving the crates without a word, forming a black wave of motion.
One of the crewmen dropped to the floor, laughing madly. âWeâre rich. Weâre so damn rich!â
"But we're already rich." Erie muttered.
Vermond didnât smile.
He stood still, eyes glowing faintly, blood on his boots, watching the broken corridor behind them.
âThis was too easyâ¦â he muttered.
He turned to the others.
âGet the loot back to the ships. Prepare for the next wave.â
Erie blinked. âNext waveâ¦?â
Vermondâs smile twitched. Just slightly.
âTheyâll come.â
The undead were halfway through hauling the crates whenâ
Clang.
The sound echoed through the vents, sharp and offbeat.
Vermond's head snapped toward the shadows.
A low voice followedâraspy, metallic.
âDid you really think Iâd leave empty-handed?â
From the far end of the corridor, a figure stepped outâblood-splattered, limping, but grinning with a mouth of jagged chrome. One eye swollen shut, the other blazing with hate.
The smuggler Vermond had spared.
Chrome-jaw.
He was dragging something.
A crate.
The crate hissed open, and out rolled a modified auto-turret, cobbled together with illegal parts, glowing sickly orange.
âYou killed my crew, freak,â Chrome-jaw spat, wiping blood from his mouth. âNow youâll see what desperation looks like.â
Gunfire roared.
The turret fired firstâslicing through the air. One undead went down, shot many times, its chest smoking.
Erie swore and ducked. âHeâs back?! This guy doesnât know how to stay dead!â
âCover fire!â Ruen shouted, tossing a grenade forward.
Boom.
The ceiling cracked.
Undead surged forwardâshields raised, moving through the chaos like wraiths.
Vermond didnât move. He just stared.
Chrome-jaw saw it.
âYou think youâre some god?! I saw you laughing while we ran!â
Vermond stepped forward. Slowly.
âLaughing?â he whispered. âNo. I was remembering your face.â
Chrome-jaw raised his rifle.
Too slow.
Vermondâs shadow darted across the floor and grabbed his leg.
The smuggler screamed as the shadow dragged him forward.
"Well... That's new." Erie said, watching Vermond.
Vermond knelt beside him. Calm. The screams didnât faze him.
âI said I let you live once,â he said. âThat was mercy. You threw it away.â
He leaned in, voice like frost. âIâm taking your soul slowly.â
The corridor dimmed. Chrome-jawâs skin paled as the shadows poured into himâdrinking. He writhed, the chrome on his face twisting, burning red-hot.
His eyes went wide.
âPLEASEââ
Too late.
His scream cut off. His body went still.
133.
Vermond stood, brushing the blood off his coat. The room had gone silent againâsave for the low hum of the crates being loaded.
Behind him, Erie shivered.
âI liked it better when you were quiet,â he muttered.
Vermond turned, eyes glowing faint green. âThen youâll hate whatâs next.â
He looked down at Chrome-jawâs twisted corpse. A flick of his handâhis soul twisted into a glowing shard and vanished into Vermondâs palm.
âKiana,â he said through the comms. âWeâre done here."
âOkay, big brother,â she said softly. âIâm watching.â Smiling faintly
Boots echoed against the station floor.
The crew of the god-tier frigate walked in silence, blood-splattered, dust-smeared, and wide-eyed. The nineteen remaining elite undead moved behind them like a second skinâsilent, armored, soulless. And at the front, Vermond walked with calm purpose, his coat swaying, eyes unreadable.
People stared.
Smugglers. Mechanics. Traders. Syndicate eyes.
Every head turned. Conversations died. Drinks froze halfway to lips. No one spoke. No one dared.
But Vermondâs crew didnât care.
They walked like nothing happened.
Like they didnât just paint an entire den in blood.
Like they didnât drag out twelve stolen crates filled with food, weapons, and metals. Like they hadnât just reduced a bounty hunter to pulp and shattered Chrome-jawâs soul into ash.
Like they belonged here.
The old man, limping slightly with a burn mark across his jacket, cracked a dry smile.
âWell,â he muttered, loud enough for the others to hear, âweâre in the Maw after all.â
Erie groaned. âGods, I need a drink.â
âShut up,â Ruen said. âYou didnât even get hit.â
Erie gestured to his coat. âThis was white.â
Kianaâs voice came through the comms. âYou did well, big brother.â
Vermond smiled a little, but didnât stop walking. His voice was cold and clear.
âNext time,â he said, âweâll take their ships too.â
And nobody in that hallwayâeven the ones holding riflesâdared to follow.
Because now they knew what had arrived in the Maw.
Something colder than law.
Something worse than war.
Something that didn't dieâand didnât forget.
They then entered the destroyer.
The undead destroyerâs ramp sealed shut with a heavy thud.
Inside, the soft hum of the engines returned, echoing through the cold, dim corridors. The raid was over. The loot was secured. Metal crates stacked neatly in the holdâtwelve of themâfilled with food, minerals, and rare components. The elite undead returned to their silent posts like statues resetting for the next war.
Vermond, wordless, made his way back to the command lounge. His coat was stained with soot and a streak of someone elseâs blood. Kiana met him thereâwaiting like she always did.
She smiled. âBig brother, you didnât get hurt.â
He didnât answer. He just sat down, leaned into her, and let his head fall gently into her lap.
Kianaâs fingers threaded through his hair, brushing out the dust. âRest, big brother,â she whispered, as if they werenât surrounded by none-breathing humans and machines.
Elsewhere, inside the destroyer, the frigate crew was⦠coping.
Old man Renn stared at one of the strange dark pistols like it might explode. âThis thingâs vibrating. Why is it vibrating?â
Ruen flopped down into a chair, suit still scorched. âI got shot in the leg and I think it fused part of my boot to my skin. Anyone got a med kit? Or whiskey?â
One of the younger crew poked a crate. âI think this one's hissing. Is that good?â
Erie walked in, holding an armful of random loot and a half-eaten ration bar. He looked like heâd just sprinted through a minefield and liked it.
âHey,â he said, chewing. âOne of the elites caught a crate with its face. Just headbutted it mid-air. I think Iâve imprinted.â
Renn pointed at the wall screenâsecurity feed of Vermond asleep on Kianaâs lap. âMeanwhile, our terrifying commander is getting pampered like a house cat.â
Erie squinted at it. âYeah, well, Iâd sleep too if I just turned a bounty hunter into soup.â
Another crewmember chimed in, deadpan: âYou think he dreams in color? Or just static and screaming?â
Someone from the back said, âWeâre in a horror movie and weâre the comic relief. I can feel it.â
Ruen groaned. âI watched one of the elites destroyed some guy's helmet. It didnât even need to. It just wanted to.â
A long pause.
Erie leaned on the table. âSo... what now?â
Old man Renn sighed, âWe wait. And pray he doesnât decide weâre âin the wayâ one day.â
Erie popped the last bite of ration bar into his mouth. âEh. Iâve been with him until now, he won't do that... Unless..â
"Unless what?" Another crew member asked.
"Unless we lay a hand at that beautiful goddess." Erie said, Pointing at Kiana on the security feed.
Back in the destroyer's bridge.
Vermond lay still, his head resting peacefully in Kianaâs lap. His eyes were closed, his breathing steadyâbut the flicker in his eyelids said otherwise. He wasnât asleep. He was listening.
Kiana hummed softly, brushing a speck of ash from his cheek with a maternal precision that didnât match the mountain of corpses theyâd just walked over. Her touch was gentle, like the world hadnât just watched him incinerate a bounty hunter.
Thenâfootsteps. Too loud. Too casual.
Erie entered, arms crossed, a smirk already crawling across his face.
âWell, isnât this adorable,â he said, leaning on the doorway. âCommander Death himself, curled up like a lost puppy.â
Kiana didnât even look at him. âBig brother needs rest. Unlike you, he actually does something.â
Erie raised an eyebrow. âOh? Who dragged two crates full of metal across the station while ducking plasma fire?â
âYou dropped one and it nearly flattened Ruen.â
âI was under pressure!â
âYou sneezed and tripped.â
âThat floor was uneven! And dusty!â
Vermondâs lips twitched. Just a little.
Kiana finally glanced at Erie. âBesides, you donât get to tease when you screamed during the grenade blast.â
âIt was a tactical yell.â
âIt sounded like a bird being stepped on.â
âDid not! It was a deep, commanding war cry!â
âEven the undead paused. One tilted its head.â
Vermond exhaledâjust softly. The barest breath of laughter.
Erie stepped closer, arms flailing now. âLook, I saved at least three people today. Minimum. Two of them were conscious.â
Kiana narrowed her eyes, still stroking her brotherâs hair. âAnd you almost shot Renn by accident.â
âHe startled me!â
âHe coughed.â
âExactly!â
Vermond opened one eye, very slowly. âChildrenâ¦â he murmured.
They both froze.
Then Erie leaned in. âHey, Vermond. Be honest. If one of us had to be thrown into a fire to distract an enemy, who would it be?â
âErie,â Vermond answered without hesitation.
Kiana grinned. âSee?â
âBut,â Vermond added, closing his eyes again, âKiana would be the one who pushed you.â
She gave a satisfied smile. âBig brother is right.â
Erie just groaned and dropped onto the nearest seat, arms flopping. âI need a vacation from this undead circus.â
âGood luck,â Vermond muttered from her lap. âYouâre already buried in it.â
While Vermond rested inside the destroyer, the frigate crew had... other plans.
âAlright!â one of them shouted, slapping on a helmet backwards. âLetâs see what this stationâs really hiding.â
The Old Man Renn, standing at the airlock door, raised one trembling hand like a prophet warning of doom. âNow hold onâThe Maw ainât your average back-alley dive, boys. This place eats newbies for breakfast and licks its teeth afterward.â
âWeâre not newbies,â someone said confidently, nearly falling down the ramp.
âName three things you know about The Maw,â Renn challenged, eye twitching.
âUh⦠dark, scary, illegal?â
Renn pinched the bridge of his nose. âIâm too old for this.â
Too late.
Sixteen overeager explorers in mixed gear charged into the winding guts of The Maw like kids on a field trip through a haunted asylum. Within minutes:
âOne crew member got caught in a poker game with three cybernetic lizards and bet their pants. Lost.
âAnother activated a vending machine that sprayed napalm.
âTwo got stuck in a lift with a malfunctioning AI that kept asking riddles with no answers.
âSomeone insulted a local gang leader by sneezing too close to her boots. A chase began.
Renn, trailing behind them with both hands raised like he was defusing a nuclear bomb, kept shouting, âStop poking things! Donât eat that! Thatâs not soupâitâs a sentient sludge trap!â
Ruen, calmly eating noodles beside a stall made entirely of recycled ship parts, just watched the chaos unfold. âThis is why we donât give them free time.â
Eventually, alarms started blaring. Distant gunfire echoed. A stall exploded.
Erie, back on the destroyer, watched the live feed and winced. âUhhh⦠are they looting a customs office?!â
Vermond didnât even open his eyes. âLet them. We needed a distraction anyway.â
Back in the station, Renn tackled one of the crew members as they tried to stuff a glowing orb into their backpack. âDO YOU EVEN KNOW WHAT THIS IS?!â
âNo, but it looked shiny!â
âThatâs a temporal disruptor! It eats time!â
âOh. My bad.â
âYou brought me madness.â Renn muttered, dragging him away by the collar. âMadness with a rifle.â
In the middle of the chaosâblaring alarms, confused vendors, and a very angry boot-polishing syndicateâthe youngest of the frigate crew, Kez, tripped over a broken pipe.
âUgh, damn thing,â he muttered, kicking it.
The floor under the pipe clicked.
Everyone froze.
â...Thatâs not supposed to click,â muttered Ruen through his comms.
A section of the floor groaned, then shifted. A metal hatch hissed open beneath Kezâs feet, revealing a steep staircase leading into dim blue light.
The crew stared.
âSecret tunnel?â someone whispered.
âSecret vault?â someone else whispered louder.
âNope. Weâre leaving. Right now.â Renn was already backing up. âYou hear me? If thereâs one thing The Maw doesnât doââ
Kez took the first step down.
Renn sighed, staring up at the ceiling like he was begging the stars for patience. âWhy do I even bother...â
They descended. Slowly. Carefully.
The air grew colder.
And thenâthey found it.
A vault. Massive. Old Federation make, covered in dust, half-buried under The Mawâs newer structures. And inside?
Fifteen crates.
Each sealed tight, marked with the old warning symbols for high-value trade.
Ruen scanned them from the comms. âThatâs food. Rare rations. Processed metals. And... hold on. One of those crates has Isenium.â
âIsenium?â Renn blinked. âThatâs enough to power a dreadnoughtâs core for a month!â
The crew erupted in cheers.
âThat meansââ one said, grabbing another by the shoulders, âweâre rich!â
âNo,â Renn groaned. âThat means weâre dead men walking. The Maw donât lose crates like these without someone noticing. And whoever owned them?â
He pointed a shaking finger at the crates.
âTheyâre already looking for you.â
Erie, watching on the screen, whispered, âOh, crapâ¦â
Back on the destroyer, Kiana tapped Vermondâs shoulder gently.
He opened one eye.
âThey found something, big brother.â
Vermond sighed. âOf course they did.â
Vermond then didn't speak.
He simply exhaled, slow and steady, resting his head a little deeper on Kianaâs lap.
But then, without a single gesture, three elite undeadâThe none-breathing humans near the ramp straightenedâperfectly synchronized. Their eyes flared white. Wordlessly, they turned and began marching toward the lower levels of the station.
Kiana blinked, smiling. âBig brother really knows what to do.â
Vermond finally spokeâquiet, amused. "Theyâve already won the fight. Now weâre just collecting the reward.â
He tapped the comms, a faint smirk curling on his lips.
âTo Renn,â he said smoothly, âand the crew of the flying disaster...â
Erie leaned forward. âDonât say itââ
âGood job,â Vermond said, the smile deepening. âYouâll all be receiving a promotion.â
Cheers broke out on the other end.
âWait, really?â one of the crew shouted.
âWhat kind of promotion?â another asked, followed by, âDo we get badges?!â
Renn groaned. âDonât encourage them, Vermond. They just poked a sleeping hive of plasma-slinging lunatics, and now they think theyâre heroes.â
Vermond chuckled darkly. âThey found Isenium. That alone puts them above half the scum in The Maw.â
He closed his eyes again.
Kiana brushed a hand through his hair, smirking. âBig brother, youâre soft on them.â
âTheyâre useful,â he replied, voice low. âFor now.â
Outside, the undead marched onâsilent. Inevitable.
The Isenium would be theirs before the station even realized what was happening.
Minutes tick by, and the god-tier frigate crew finally came back with the crates on hands.
The last crate clunked into place, stacked neatly beside the others in the destroyerâs cargo hold. The elite undeads stood silent as statues again, not a single step wasted, not a single word spoken. The crew from the god-tier frigate were catching their breathâgrinning, high-fiving, some still marveling at the polished veins of raw Isenium inside one of the crates.
Renn adjusted his coat and looked around. âAlright boys, smooth and clean. No alarms. No blood. Just like the old days.â
Thenâ
A scream echoed through the Mawâs metallic halls.
âTHIEF!â someone shrieked. âTHE VAULTâS BEEN RAIDED!â
Footsteps thundered. Lights flashed. Sirens began to wail through the upper levels. Shouts exploded in every direction.
âLock it down! Find them!â
âThat vault held half the Mawâs central trade chips!â
âWhereâs the scanner team?! Get heat readingsânow!â
From the safety of the destroyerâs dark hangar, Erie slowly turned his head, still sitting near Vermond. âSooo... that wasnât us, right?â
Vermond, eyes half-closed and still resting with his head in Kianaâs lap, answered flatly, âNo. We donât leave fingerprints.â
Erie looked at him with a curious sarcastic expression. âThen who did?â
Vermond shrugged slightly. âSomeone with bad timing.â
Erie leaned back in his seat, arms crossed. âThe Mawâs gonna eat itself alive trying to find a ghost.â
Outside the destroyer, chaos escalated. Armed groups were now sweeping every dock and corridor. Two different smuggler clans were already arguing, and weapons were starting to get drawn.
âShould we leave?â Erie asked.
âNot yet,â Vermond murmured. âLet them tear each other apart first.â
Erie grinned. âYouâre enjoying this, arenât you?â
Vermondâs eyes glinted faintly, just a sliver of green behind his lashes. âI enjoy silence. This is just the warm-up act.â
A moment passed, and then Old man Rennâs voice crackled over the comms.
âUh... good news. They think some gang from Patrr did it. They're forming a hunt party.â
Vermond smiled softly. âPerfect.â
Then he turned toward Erie. "Prepare for launch.â
Erie stood, stretching. âYou know, I love it when we leave just before the fireworks.â
The undead began moving againâquiet and efficientâreadying the ship for departure as behind them, the Maw spiraled into confusion, rage, and inevitable violence.
Back inside the destroyer, things had settled again. The crew from the frigate had returned to their postsâtired but grinning. The Isenium and metals were secured, and the cargo hold sealed tight. Outside, the Maw was still ablaze with confusion, but inside, Vermond sat on his usual seat near the command console, his tone cold and calm.
âWeâre not building a station anymore,â Vermond said flatly, addressing everyone through the shared comms. âToo slow. Too exposed.â
He leaned forward, eyes narrowed. âWeâll find oneâand rebuild it.â
A soft crackle came through the comms. Then Rennâs voice followed, gruff and nostalgic. âHeh... I might know a place.â
Silence.
Erie raised a brow. âYou always do.â
Renn continued, âBig station. Real big. Federation built it, then lost it. Been dead for decades. They called it Vella-9.â
âWhy abandoned?â Vermond asked.
Renn paused for a beat, then said, âBecause itâs near a black hole.â
Erie frowned. â...Thatâs insane.â
âYou asked for hidden,â Renn said, amused. âNothing hides better than gravity that wants to eat time itself.â
Ruen's voice chimed in next, more cautious. âWe also scanned it a few years back when I was still in the federation. Still stable. Artificial orbit. Mostly intact. Just... dead.â
âAny survivors?â Erie asked.
âNone,â Ruen replied. âUnless you count the shadows.â
Vermond smiled slowly.
âSet the course,â he said. âVella-9 sounds like home.â
Erie blinked. âWeâre seriously going there?â
Vermond looked at him, voice cool. âWhere better to grow than a place nobody dares to touch?â
Erie grinned from his console. âOne haunted ruin near a cosmic abyss coming right up.â
The undead destroyer began to hum again. The god-tier frigate lit its systems beside it. Both vessels, silent and monstrous in design, waited in the dark of the Mawâready to vanish from chaos and head toward something older, colder⦠and forgotten.
Rennâs voice muttered one last thing before the comms clicked out.
âYouâll love it.â
Vermond's eyes glinted faintly.
âI'll sure will.â