The station loomed aheadâancient and monolithic, drifting at the edge of eternity. Its hull was scarred by time, layered with faded insignias, forgotten faction emblems, and rusted metal that pulsed faintly with unknown energy. It didnât feel built. It felt grownâas if the void itself had birthed it.
The god-tier frigate docked first. Magnetic clamps hissed, locking onto the warped airlock with a groan. Inside, the crew prepared in silenceâhelmets sealed, dark pistols primed. Renn stood at the ramp, arms crossed, a grim smile tugging at his weathered face.
âKeep your lids down and your mouths shut,â he muttered. âThis placeâs been whisperinâ since the first time I laid eyes on it. Still ainât stopped.â
The undead destroyer docked opposite, its ramp descending with a metallic sigh. Elite undead spilled out in perfect silence, their armor catching the low red light. Behind them stood Vermond, Kiana, and Erieâwatchful, unmovingâas the stationâs vast, shadowed interior seemed to breathe.
A deep hum echoed from within.
Kiana, softly: âBig brother... someoneâs inside.â
Vermondâs eyes flickered green. âNo. Something is.â
Erie shifted, hand near his weapon. âWhy do I feel like we just stepped into a horror holovid?â
They moved as one. The corridors were too wide, too tallâdesigned for something not quite human. Tattered banners hung from rusted beams. Graffiti in extinct tongues lined the walls. Some doors were sealed with old welds.
Others slid open on their own.
In the control chamber, dust coated dead consolesâuntil one screen blinked to life.
No command. No activation.
Just words.
> âEvacuate.â
âCODE RED: EVACUATE.â
Ruenâs voice buzzed through the comms. âUh⦠nobody typed that.â
Renn, for once, didnât quip. He stared at the screen. âThatâs the emergency protocol. But no oneâs here to run it.â
Far below, something shifted.
Not footsteps.
Dragging.
And deeper stillâbeneath steel, beneath scannersâa pulse.
Thump.
Thump.
Thump.
Vermondâs voice was low. âSecure the cargo bays. Spread out.â
His eyes narrowed as the flickering lights stuttered again.
âThis place is ours now.â
The sound grew louder.
Thump.
Thump.
Thump.
Metal groaned. Distant echoes crawled along the wallsâwet, heavy, dragging sounds. Pipes trembled overhead. The floor vibrated, just slightly, like something massive was stirring beneath the deck.
The elite undead stood motionless⦠then one turned.
Then another.
One by one, like a silent chain reaction, they began to moveâtoward the source of the sound.
Their eyes glowed white. Their armor clanked with cold precision.
Erie stepped back, glancing at Vermond. âUhh... why are they moving?â
Vermond didnât answer at first. He just smiled.
That faint, unnerving smile.
âThey heard it,â he said. âAnd theyâre hungry.â
Erie blinked. âThatâs not creepy at all.â
Then it happened.
The destroyerâs cargo ramp hissed againâand hundreds of elite undead marched out in formation. A flood of armored elites, their rifles locked in position, their steps perfectly synced. The deck shuddered with their weight. No voices. No commands.
Just cold, ruthless intent.
The hallway filled with the sound of their marchâlike a mechanical heartbeat pounding against the stationâs own.
Vermond stood still, letting the wind from their passing tug at his coat. His voice was barely a whisper.
âThis station is ours.â
And the elite undead charged into the black halls of the stationârifles raised, shields gleaming, like death itself was reclaiming forgotten ground.
The crew of the god-tier frigate wandered the outer wings of the stationâflashlights slicing through stale air, boots crunching on old dust. Ruen and the others scanned abandoned living quarters and collapsed hallways, prying open crates, collecting loose parts and scraps of data chips.
It was quiet. Too quiet.
Then they heard it.
Marching.
Renn turned to the source of the sound just in time to see itâwave after wave of elite undead, storming through a side corridor like a river of steel. Their white eyes glowed like stars, their rifles clutched in tight, disciplined grip. They moved without hesitation, a storm of undead force.
One of the crew whispered, âWhat the hell are theyââ
Then the station shook.
A deep, inhuman sound rumbled through the wallsânot a machine. Not a reactor. Something⦠alive.
A warning scream cut through the comms. "Motion! Something bigâreally big!"
And then they saw it.
Emerging from the shadows of a broken hangar bayâ¦
A massive entity.
A pulsing, malformed beast slithered forwardâits body a twisting mass of tentacles, slick and shimmering with a liquid sheen. Its core glowed faintly red, like a furnace heart buried in a sea of rot. Dozens of glinting eyes blinked across its surfaceâerratic, twitching, watching everything.
Ruen stumbled back, jaw slack. âThatâsâwhat even is that?!â
The monsterâs tentacles scraped the walls, tearing rusted steel apart like paper. With every movement, the air warped, like space itself was choking.
Rennâs voice was hoarse. âIâve seen things in the Maw⦠but this ainât one of âem.â
The creature screechedâa high, piercing cry that shattered old windows.
The elite undead didnât falter.
They moved toward it.
Dozens.
Then hundreds.
Weapons raised.
Renn backed up fast, barking into the comms. âVermond! Youâve got company. Big, slimy, and pissed!â
Vermondâs reply came cold and steady.
âI know.â
The monster shrieked, its limbs lashing outward like wet whips of ink and bone. It struck againâmetal screamed, lights shattered, and an elite undead was torn in half mid-run.
The others didnât waver.
But it was gaining ground.
Suddenlyâ
Kianaâs voice cut through the comms, soft and clear.
âBig brother,â she said gently, reclining on her usual couch inside the destroyer, a warm drink in her hand, eyes flicking between data on the cracked monitors. âThereâs a sac just beneath its coreâright shoulder. It pulses every 7.2 seconds. Thatâs its heart. Aim for that.â
A pause.
Then she added, almost lazily, âTry not to miss. It might get angry.â
Vermond, walking alone down the warping corridor toward the battlefield, grinned slowly.
The green lightning in his hand pulsed once.
Back near the front, Erie flinched as a pipe burst beside him, then shouted over the comms, âWait, how the hell did she figure that out?!â
Vermondâs voice crackled in, calm and amused:
âYou said sheâs a genius.â
Erie blinked. âYeah, butââ He paused. âDamn. I did.â
The monster roared againâbut now the undead shifted. They knew.
Dozens of rifles re-angled in eerie synchronicity.
The rhythm of the march changed.
The hunt was on.
The monster gave one final, gurgling shriekâits writhing limbs thrashing as the elite undead closed in like a tide. Dozens of precise shots struck the pulsing sac Kiana had marked. Black ichor exploded from the wound. The creature twisted in agony, its tentacles flailing wildlyâ
Then it collapsed.
Dead.
The silence that followed was thick. Even the flickering lights of the station seemed to pause in respect.
Erie stepped forward, panting lightly. He looked down at the smoldering remains, then glanced at Vermond, whose hand still crackled with fading green lightning.
ââ¦Is this why the Federation abandoned this place?â he muttered.
Before Vermond could answer, footsteps echoed down the corridor. Old man Renn approached, flanked by the god-tier frigate crewâdusty, tired, wide-eyed.
âYou guysâ¦â Renn started, stopping a few feet from the monsterâs corpse. He looked between it and the undead forces standing perfectly still.
âYou guys actually defeated it?â
Vermond turned his head slightly, shadows crawling along the edge of his cloak.
âKiana found its heart,â he said simply.
Old man Renn blinked, then muttered, âOf course she did.â
One of the frigate crew whispered, âIs it really dead?â
One of the elite undead silently crushed the monsterâs pulsing eye underfoot.
âYeah,â Erie said, exhaling. âItâs dead.â
Vermond didnât look away from the corpse. âLetâs clear the rest of the station. Then we rebuild.â
And from deep within the ruined beastâs body⦠something glowed.
Erie stepped cautiously toward the glowing mass nestled within the creatureâs hollowed chest. âUh⦠that thingâs still glowing. Is that⦠normal?â
Vermondâs eyes narrowed. The light pulsed slowlyâgreen, laced with deep violet tendrils that curled like veins. It wasnât just energy.
It was alive.
The elite undead instantly formed a silent perimeter around the body, weapons raisedâbut none fired. Not without Vermondâs command.
Kianaâs voice came through the comms, calm and analytical. âBig brotherâ¦â
A pause. Then:
âItâs a core. Bio-fused. Not just powerâmaybe a key.â
The old man furrowed his brow. âA key to what?â
âI donât know,â Kiana replied softly, âbut⦠the station changed the moment that thing died, Grandpa.â
Renn blinked. âG-Grandpaâ¦?â He coughed, blushing, then turned to others, daring them to laugh.
Vermond moved closer, his hand still sparking faintly with necrotic lightning. As he approached, the station seemed to thrum with recognition. The air itself pulsed.
The core reacted to him.
Erieâs voice lowered. âYou sure touching thatâs a good idea?â
âI donât do good ideas,â Vermond mutteredâand placed his hand on it.
A blinding flash.
No screamâyet every mind heard it. A psychic wail that tore through the station like thunder.
Metal creaked. Lights shattered. Across the forgotten corridors, sealed doors slammed open with a groan like waking giants.
Kiana gasped through the feed. âBrother⦠you just woke up the stationâs central system.â
Renn took a slow step back, wide-eyed. âWeâre in, boys.â
From the corpseâs chamber, a long hallway lit up aheadâancient symbols glowing across the floor like circuitry coming alive.
Vermond stood at its entrance, smoke trailing from his palm. His eyes glowed with a sharper green, brighter than before.
He let a small smile tug at the corner of his mouth. âThe stationâs ours,â he said. âWeâre claiming everything.â
Erie sighed and dragged a hand down his face. âThis is absolutely gonna get worse before it gets better.â
Vermond: âWithout a doubt.â
Then came a soft voice, broadcast from hidden speakersâold, metallic, female.
âCore recognized. Reactivating systems.â
Lights blinked to life, one after another.
The station stirred.
It wasnât dead. Just asleep.
Now it was awake.
And watching.
The expedition began in silence and steel.
Vermond, Erie, Kiana, and the others ascended through the stationâs massive inner shaftsâhalf-collapsed lifts and forgotten stairwells winding toward the highest levels. At the top, buried beneath layers of dust and decay, they found the Command Center: a vast circular chamber lined with shattered screens, dormant holo-pads, and a reinforced viewport that overlooked the star-scarred abyss. The walls whispered of age, but beneath the rust and silence, power still lingered like an echo.
Beside it, now unlocked by their efforts, loomed a vault sealed by thick blast doorsâstill untouched, still waiting.
Below them, the elite undead moved with mechanical precision. Crates were offloaded and sortedâfood reserves, refined alloys, alien relics, and glowing crystals that pulsed faintly under flickering lights. Each item stacked with military order across the cargo bays and storage decks.
Vermond stood at the heart of the Command Center, his eyes watching the faint systems flicker back to life. From within his side.
The Illegal Federation Star Map.
He placed it gently on the central console.
âKind of glad we didnât sell this for a hundred million credits back in maw,â he muttered. âWouldâve been the dumbest thing I ever did.â
Kiana sat beside him, quietly working on a nest of old network ports. She reached out and briefly took his hand, smiled faintly, her voice low and steady. âNow itâs the smartest thing youâve ever done, Big Brother.â
Not everything was broken. Some consoles stuttered awake, old systems coughed back into function, and backup power purred through ancient conduits. But the station still groaned with age. Rust gripped every surface, and the main viewport revealed gaping wounds in the outer hullâscars left by time⦠or worse.
Erie wandered into one of the side corridors, following a flickering trail of light to a forgotten auxiliary dock.
And there, beneath a layer of dust and long silence, he found them.
A massive hangar bay, quiet as a tomb.
Lined up against the far wall, coated in faded Federation blue and bearing ghosted insigniasâ
Six old Federation Fighters.
Sleek. Fast. Built for strike runs and hit-and-fade attacks. The hulls were scarred, some panels torn awayâbut the frames held strong. With enough sweat and scrapâ¦
They could fly again.
Erieâs eyes lit up. A grin tugged at his lips.
âWell, hello, old beauties,â he whispered. âWeâre gonna have some fun.â
He clicked his comms. âOld man. I found toys.â
Rennâs voice crackled back, half-amused. âKeep âem warm. Weâll need âem soon.â
Rebuilding began not with noise, but with motion.
The station had awakenedâits heart still rusted, its bones brittle, but its purpose flickering back to life. In the hollow corridors and shattered halls, sparks flew. Welding torches hissed. Machinery groaned awake after centuries of silence.
The elite undead moved like an army of shadowsâno complaints, no fatigue. They cleared debris, reinforced structural points, and patched the worst of the hull breaches. Some worked on gravity relays, others on restoring pressure to dead sections. Their glowing eyes illuminated the dark as they toiled without rest.
Kiana sat in the half-lit Command Center, tapping into half-buried systems with calm precision. Her voice came softly over the comms.
âReactor B is operational. Oxygen generators in sectors 4 through 9 are back online.â
She sipped something warm, green light flickering across her emerald eyes. âRebooting AI core now.â
Erie stood at a hangar entrance, sleeves rolled up, oil on his face. Heâd already pulled one fighter halfway into working condition.
âI swear,â he muttered, tightening a bolt with an old wrench, âI was not built for honest work.â
Then grinned.
âBut damn, this feels good.â
Down in the cargo bay, crates were opened and sorted. Supplies, weapons, fusion coils, hydroponic seed kitsâevery salvageable scrap catalogued and repurposed.
Vermond walked through the station like a ghost with a crownâsilent, watchful, eyes glowing faintly as he oversaw every section. He didnât give many orders. He didnât need to. The undead understood his will. The crew trusted his vision. This wasnât just about claiming a station.
It was about building something that couldnât be taken away.
Renn stood by a half-lit console, arms crossed, nodding in approval.
âIâve seen a lotta outposts in my time,â he said to no one in particular, âbut I think this one⦠this one might make history.â
Above them all, the central lights of the station flickered from rust-orange to clean white.
The station groaned as scaffolding wrapped around its fractured limbsâsteel braces gripping ancient alloy like a skeleton regaining its stance.
In the newly restored communications chamberâstill humming with static and patched wiresâVermond stood before the holotable. The walls were lined with repurposed panels, flickering conduits, and an elite undead guard standing motionless near the door like a statue.
The screen sparked, glitched, then stabilized.
The familiar smirk of the Merchant Captain from DryUntilWet flickered into view.
âWell, well. Didnât think Iâd see your pale face this soon,â he drawled. âHowâs the old man Renn holding up?â
Vermond didnât bother with small talk. He held up a slender datachip. âEight million credits. Maw auction transfer. One dark crystalâsold to a collector with more cash than caution.â
The merchant leaned closer, eyes lighting up. âI heard about that mess. Word is the thing nearly cooked his brain.â
Vermondâs lips curled faintly. âHe paid for madness. Got a good return.â
He tapped the holotable. A holographic blueprint of the station spun into the air, bathed in pale blue. Red markers dotted the hull like wounds. Vermond pointed to the perimeter.
âI want medium-grade plating. Enough to seal every breach, reinforce docking ports, and cover the entire outer ring. Modular sets, hardened composite, full resistance specâfireproof, radiation-sealed.â
The merchant let out a low whistle. âYouâre not patching this place⦠Youâre rearming it.â
âI donât rebuild things halfway,â Vermond replied.
A beat passed. Then the merchant flipped a few switches off-screen.
âAlright, Commander Dead-Eyes. Youâve got yourself a full supply drop. Iâll warp in the cargo within twenty-four hoursâsealed, sorted, dock three. Youâre sure about spending the whole pile?â
âIâm not planning on doing this twice.â
The connection ended with a sharp tone.
A moment later, Erie walked in, sleeves rolled up, oil streaked across his arms and brow. He dropped onto a crate, wiping his hands with a rag.
âThat the sound of us being financially obliterated?â
Vermond didnât look away from the blueprint.
âThat was the sound of us buying permanence.â
High above, in the cold silence of the void, the DryUntilWet lit its enginesâand began loading crates.
Steel reinforcements. Composite armor.
Before the cargo arrived, Ruen stumbled upon something unexpected.
Ruen had been wandering one of the mid-level corridorsâhalf out of boredom, half chasing a faint power reading on his handheld scanner. The deeper he went, the more the station seemed to open to him. Vines peeked from broken vents. The scent of something⦠sweet?
He turned a final rusted corner and froze.
A massive atrium stretched before him, lit by cracked but still-functioning grow lamps overhead. The walls were lined with translucent panels, glowing faintly with bioluminescent moss. But the centerpieceâ
A functioning space farm.
Dozens of long hydroponic beds stretched across the chamber, still moist, still vibrant. Towering stalks of moon-apples, gravity pears, and glowing starlotus fruit swayed gently in an artificial breeze. Strange alien trees curled upward with roots embedded in nutrient gel.
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Ruen blinked. âWhat the hellâ¦â
He plucked a small blue fruitâspongy, warm, and glowing faintly from within. He gave it a sniff. It didnât smell poisonous.
Then, a robotic irrigation unit zoomed past on dusty treads, spraying mist over a row of purple tubers as if it had never stopped its job in the last few decades.
Ruen tapped his comms, eyes still wide.
âUh⦠guys? I found something. Youâre not gonna believe this, but⦠weâve got a working farm. With fruit. Likeâreal fruit. I just ate one. Might be radioactive. Worth it.â
Static crackled, then Erieâs voice replied:
âYou what? Ruen, no one eats glowing fruit before confirming itâs not weaponized.â
âIâm fine!â Ruen said, voice muffled slightly. âActually, I feel great. Is my skin supposed to tingle?â
Old man Renn cut in. âDonât touch anything else. If itâs still functional, it means the station had long-term life-support plans. That means seeds, maybe a water recycler.â
Erie: âOr alien fruit parasites. Just saying.â
Vermondâs voice came last, quiet and thoughtful:
âMark it down. Weâll call it Eden Deck. Letâs not waste what we just inherited.â
Somewhere in the misty green chamber, another irrigation bot beeped happily⦠then promptly drove into a wall and exploded.
Ruen took another bite. âStill worth it.â
Twenty-four hours later, space shivered.
A ripple split the stars just beyond the stationâs perimeter. From the void, six massive cargo freighters blinked into existenceâgrey, blocky, and old, bearing the merchant captainâs mark on their hulls: a stylized gold coin and a crooked smile.
Dock Three lit up. Clamps extended, groaning under their own age as the first freighter slid into position with a heavy metallic thud. Automated messages chimed through the stationâsome in garbled old dialects, others in long-forgotten trade tongues.
Inside the command center, Vermond and Kiana watched from the wide viewport.
âThey made it, Big brother.â Kiana said, eyes scanning the incoming data streams.
Vermond nodded. âLetâs wake the dead.â
Below, the cargo ramps hissed open.
Dozens of elite undead marched forwardâsilent, precise, unfaltering. Their orders were burned into their minds by Vermondâs command: unpack, distribute, begin reinforcement.
And so, the rebuild began.
Giant modular panelsâflickering with internal tech and reinforced alloyâwere floated through the shattered exterior sections of the station. Sections once left gaping open to vacuum were sealed, bolted, and pressurized. Hull cracks were patched with heat-forged composite. Docking rings were replaced entirely, wide enough now to accept frigates, cruisers, even larger haulers in the future.
Erie led a team of undead welders, his sleeves rolled up, sparks flying as he barked instructions and cursed at ancient junctions.
âYou, clamp that beam! You, stop waving the plasma torch like a glowstick!âNo, Ruen, I donât care if it looks cool!â
Meanwhile, Kiana rewired key subsystems. Old conduits were replaced with new energy cores. Broken terminals flickered to life under her hands. The station's AIâstill groggy from its awakeningâbegan stabilizing interior climate, power flow, and structural alerts.
âEnvironmental control back online,â it droned, voice oddly polite. âHull integrity at 73% and climbing. Caution: wild animals detected in habitat deck.â
Vermond stood amidst it all, overseeing the reconstruction with quiet intensity. His coat was dusty, hands gloved in soot and sealant. But his eyes burned bright. This wasnât just restoration. This was rebirth.
And in every corridor, every floorâsomething stirred.
Lights returned to ancient systems.
Echoes of the past gave way to the footfalls of the present.
Then, it began with a flicker.
A pulse, deep beneath the reactor decksâtoo far for normal scanners, but just enough to catch Kianaâs attention as she monitored the rerouted systems.
âBig brother, somethingâs drawing power,â she muttered, leaning closer to the display. âLower levels⦠far below the core.â
Vermond stood behind her, arms folded. âI thought we mapped everything.â
âYou mapped everything they wanted you to see, Big brother,â Kiana replied, already tapping into the diagnostic feed. âThis is behind multiple airlocks. No blueprints. No access codes. Just a blank section tagged âNull Zoneâ.â
Erie leaned in, chewing on half a protein bar. âThat sounds like exactly the place we shouldnât go.â
âWhich means weâre definitely going,â Vermond said, already walking.
They descended.
Three levels below the command deck, beyond rusted catwalks and half-functional lifts, they found itâan enormous blast door, circular, embossed with ancient Federation symbols half-erased by time and soot. It wasnât just sealed. It was buried. Reinforced plating. External locks. Hardened clamps. It looked like someone had gone out of their way to keep it shut.
Or keep something in.
Erie frowned. âWe need a core key to bypass this.â
Vermond raised his left handâstill faintly marked from when he touched the monsterâs bio-core.
The door responded.
Gears whirred. Rust groaned. Locking pins cracked from decades of pressure.
And then, with a deafening grind, the door began to open.
Beyond itâdarkness. Not empty space. Not silence.
A void that felt alive. The air hung heavier. The floor dipped lower, becoming part metal, part black stone. Symbols glowed faintly across the wallsâunfamiliar, shifting as if they were trying to rearrange themselves into something understandable.
Erie squinted into the abyss. âOkay, so⦠anyone else feel like weâre standing in the opening scene of a cursed documentary?â
Vermond whispered, âThis isnât just a hidden section. Itâs alien. Modified. Someone⦠or something else built this down here.â
Kiana stepped beside Vermond, holding his hands, eyes glowing faintly in the dark, while smiling. âLets go, Big brother.â
The elite undead behind them raised their weaponsâattached floodlights beaming ahead into the unknown. What it revealed was a massive chamber stretching into the distance. Rows of what looked like pods, twisted machinery, and⦠something moving. Very slowly. Almost breathing.
A long, forgotten warning blinked in crimson above a rusted terminal:
DO NOT DISTURB THE VAULTED ONES.
IN CASE OF BREACH, EVACUATE IMMEDIATELY.
Vermond cracked his neck.
âWell,â he said. âLooks like we found the stationâs real secret.â
The chamber stretched endlessly forwardâdark, silent, and humming with cold, dormant life.
Rows of pods lined the walls, stacked three levels high. Most were shattered. Some were warped by age and exposure. But a few⦠a few still glowed faintly. Inside them floated partial shapesâhalf-formed humanoids with blurred features, veins of green fluid running through them like vines in a dying forest.
Kiana moved first, brushing dust off a rusted console. The interface chirped weakly as she pulled up ancient logs. Her green eyes darted left and right, scanning the flood of corrupted data.
ââ¦Failed cloning experiments,â she murmured. âFederation techâbut⦠not Federation design. Looks like someone modified the genetics. Tried to cross human templates with⦠something else.â
Erie stood a few paces back, arms crossed, watching Vermond carefully. âAnd let me guess⦠youâve got ideas.â
Vermondâs light-filled eyes reflected off the nearest pod as he slowly smiled.
âNot yet. But soon.â
He reached forward, brushing a hand across the glass. The thing inside shifted ever so slightlyâits face twitching into the hint of a snarl before falling still again. The core systems around them flickeredâsome sections attempting to reboot, some quietly resisting.
âThis could be a foundry,â Vermond said. âIf I fix the sequencing code⦠stabilize the decay rates⦠I could make something new.â
âLike an army? You already have your Undeads..â Erie asked, already regretting the question.
Vermond shrugged, still smiling. âExtra soldiers that donât rot.â
Kiana, holding her brotherâs arm now, looked up at him with a small smirk. âMaybe they can clean the hallways, too.â
Erie sighed. âYou two are actually enjoying this.â
Vermond turned to him, still smiling. âErie, I just found a cloning vault built on top of an alien genetic lab. This might be the first time in history someoneâs smiled while standing over the bones of a galactic war crime.â
Kiana leaned against her brother and added softly, âItâs our war crime now, Big brother.â
Erie groaned. âThatâs not the comfort you think it is.â
The pods around them flickered as if stirred by the sound of voices.
Somewhere deep within the system⦠something was waiting to be activated.
The cloning chamber hummed to life in broken wavesâfirst a sputter of sparks, then slow pulses of deep green light. Ancient coolant lines hissed like waking serpents as Vermond pried open the main terminal, his necrotic-surge-infused hand crackling with quiet energy. The system was brittle, scarred by time, but not dead.
It was waiting.
Beside him, Kiana knelt at the fractured console, fingers moving like flowing code as she rewired dead nodes and overrode ancient security layers.
âPower stabilizing, Big Brother,â she murmured, the screenâs glow reflecting in her eyes. âIf we sync your energy with the coreâs rhythm⦠we might trigger sequencing mode.â
âI can handle the surge,â Vermond replied softly. âJust stay close.â
She glanced up, one of those rare, gentle looks that stilled him for a heartbeat.
âIâm always close,â she whispered, resting her head lightly against his shoulder as she continued to work.
Ten feet back, Erie stood with an armful of tangled wires, visibly unimpressed.
âOh my god,â he groaned. âYouâre rebooting the single most cursed Federation experiment Iâve ever seen⦠and somehow making it romantic.â
Kiana didnât even blink. âYouâre just bitter no one holds your hand while you hack corpse labs, Mister Lonely.â
Erie raised a fingerâthen stopped. ââ¦Okay, fair. But stillâthis is grotesque and you're Soo adorable. Iâm gonna poke my eyes out.â
Vermond smirked, brushing away the last fragments of glass shielding the core chamber. âBorrow one of the eliteâs replacements. Iâll even gift wrap it.â
Kiana chuckled, wiping dust from his coat with a soft flick. âFocus, Big brother.â
âAlright,â Vermond replied.
Erie dropped the wires with a dramatic clatter. âThatâs it. Iâm going back to the elevator. I refuse to witness domestic necromancy.â
As he stormed off, the chamber around them began to respond.
Screens blinked to life. Tubes pulsed. And the cloning pods⦠stirred.
One of them lit up fullyâsystems active, stable.
And standing there, Kiana nestled against him, Vermond smiled.
Like a man rebuilding a nightmare with the one person who made him feel alive.
With a hiss of ancient hydraulics and a shudder that echoed through the chamber, the pod began to open.
Steam poured from the edges as the locks disengaged. The inside glowed faintly, casting a sickly green hue across the floor. Within the podâempty. No clone. Just a preserved template suspended in bio-gel. A blank slate. Ready for imprinting.
Vermond took a slow step forward, studying it.
Potential. Power. Control.
And a future he could shape.
Before he could speak, warmthâKianaâs arms wrapped around his, her head gently leaning against his shoulder again.
She kissed his cheek, the gesture quiet and unhurried.
âYou really are a good brother,â she said with a smile. âEven when you're rebuilding baddies.â
He blinked, just once. That smileâso light, so trustingâalways managed to disarm the storm inside him.
ââ¦You think this makes me a good brother?â
âI think everything youâve done for us makes you one,â she said. âThis place, this futureâyouâre building it for them, Erie, The old man Renn, Ruen, the idiotic crew at the god-tier frigate.â
He looked down at her, expression unreadable for a long beat.
Then, softly: âYou're the reason I remember why.â
Behind them, the chamber continued to awakenâlines of new pods lighting up one by one, like stars forming in a void.
Erieâs voice crackled over the comms. âHey. Just checked the far corridor. Thereâs more of these labs. Not one. Three. You two might want to take your date and spread it out.â
Kiana just giggled, still holding her brotherâs arm. âGuess weâve got more work to do, Big Brother.â
Vermond smiled faintly. But he can feel it, something strange going-on' on Kiana.
Vermond stepped away from the pod, its pale light still pulsing behind him. His hand hovered over his wrist comms for a momentâthen he pressed down.
âOld man. Ruen. Everyone on the frigate. Report to the lower levels,â he said calmly. âWeâve found something. And itâs going to change everything.â
There was a pause.
Then Rennâs voice crackled in, heavy with suspicion. âYou found another horror, didnât you?â
Vermond didnât deny it. âA forgotten Federation clone bank. Fully intact. Functional. Weâre bringing it back online.â
ââ¦You insane corpse-wrangling maniac,â Renn muttered under his breath. âWeâre on our way.â
Ruenâs voice followed, oddly cheerful. âOn my way. I hope it has a kitchen. I found too many fruits to eat alone.â
Vermond smiled faintly, then turned to Erie, who had returned with a toolbox slung over his shoulder. âErie, start mapping the auxiliary lines. I want full access to power conduits and ventilation. And check the biometric panelsâsee if they can be reprogrammed.â
Erie groaned. âSo⦠we are fixing this place up like home.â
Vermond nodded. âBecause it is now.â
He turned to Kiana, still beside him.
âLetâs prep the terminals. I want a clean link between the clone system and the command center. No corruption. No backdoors.â
She smiled again. âOkay, Big brother.â
Moments later, boots echoed through the hallway as the others arrivedâRenn grumbling, Ruen casually tossing a fruit into his mouth, the rest of the god-tier crew dragging toolkits, scanners, and portable servers. The elite undead stepped aside without a sound, forming a silent perimeter.
The chamber filled with movement, minds, and purpose.
Once forgotten⦠now reborn.
Vermond looked around at the mess of light and shadow and memory.
And he whispered to himself, âLetâs build an empire out of ghosts.â
The chamber pulsed like a second heart deep within the stationâs bones.
Kianaâs fingers flew across the console, her eyes focused, lips slightly parted. Vermond stood beside her, hand glowing faintly, matching the rhythm of the cloning systemâs core. Across the room, Renn and Ruen were working fastâRuen patching conduits with gleeful focus, while Renn barked out old Federation codes from memory, cracking bypasses no one had used in decades.
Erie, half-covered in dust, yanked a power cable into place and shouted, âLast junction hooked! Weâve got full current on line three!â
The central pod hissed. Its display lit up green.
Then came a low chimeâsteady, smooth. The sound of a system returning from the edge of death.
Kiana gasped. âBig brother⦠sequencing protocol has begun. DNA integrity is⦠holding.â
The fluid inside the pod shimmered. A shape took formâhumanoid, vague, not yet whole. Muscles forming from memory. Veins threading like lightning. No signs of pain, just growth. Steady and controlled.
Vermond leaned closer, his eyes glowing like cold stars. âWeâll start slow. One subject. No memories. No implants. Just a body. A vessel.â
Kiana nodded, holding his arm. âWe can imprint later, when weâre ready.â
Renn stepped up, staring through the fogged glass of the pod. His voice was low. âI thought these labs were shut down for good. Youâre actually reviving one.â
âIâm not reviving it,â Vermond said. âIâm reclaiming it. The Federation wasted its power. I wonât.â
The podâs internal pulse stabilized. Life signsâsteady.
The first clone was complete.
Ruen crossed his arms, biting into another fruit. âYou sure this one wonât eat us?â
Vermond gave a slow, calculating smile. âIt wonât. Not unless I tell it to.â
The lights above them flickered onceâthen stayed on.
The chamber fell silent.
The clone floated, suspended in green lightâperfectly still. A complete human body, untouched by time or decay. No scars. No name. No soul.
Vermond stepped forward, eyes glowing faintlyâ132 shining within the pale light of his gaze.
Then he reached out.
His hand pressed against the pod.
The air shifted. The necrotic spark within him flaredâgreen lightning snapping from his fingertips, crawling along the glass like veins. A strange silence overtook the hum of machines. Kianaâs breath caught. Erie leaned forward from the back of the chamber.
ThenâVermondâs eyes flickered.
132.
131.
A soul vanished.
The cloneâs body jerked.
Not violentlyâjust⦠alive.
The podâs light dimmed. The clone's eyes opened slowly, unnaturally calm. Their irises were perfectly human. But beneath the surface, something else flickered. An echo of obedience.
The pod hissed open.
Steam coiled out into the chamber as the clone stepped forward, skin pale and bare, but whole. Perfect. Living.
It looked straight at Vermond and knelt.
âAwaiting orders.â
The voice was smooth. Human. But cold beneath the surfaceâlike the elite undead.
Ruen dropped his fruit.
Kiana tightened her grip on Vermondâs coat, stunned. âYou⦠Big brother, did you just⦠bind a soul into a living body?â
Vermondâs face was unreadable. âNot bound. Rewritten.â
Erie took a step back, half-whispering. âThatâs a whole new kind of undeadâ¦â
Vermond didnât answer. He looked at the cloneâno rot, no bone, no void in its voice. Fully human in form. Fully loyal in mind. Something new.
Something terrifying.
âStand,â Vermond ordered.
It rose immediately.
âYou will speak only when I allow it. Understand?â
The clone nodded. âYes, Master.â
Vermond turned to the others. âWe now have the first of them. Soldiers with bodies that can walk among the living. Talk. Blend. Obey.â
Kiana smiled, staring at her brother.
Vermond stood silent for a moment, eyes still glowing faintlyâ131 locked within his gaze.
The clone stood at attention, still as stone, awaiting another command. But Vermond lifted a hand and slowly turned away.
âNot yet,â he muttered.
Kiana looked up. âYouâre not going to make more?â
Vermond stared at the chamber wallsâcracked, rusted, groaning with age. The green lights from the pods cast flickering shadows that danced like ghosts across the ceiling.
âNo. Not until weâre ready.â
He turned back toward the exit, boots echoing on the metallic floor. âWe donât build monsters in ruins. We rebuild the fortress first.â
Kiana nodded, her eyes following him with soft understanding. âThen weâll make it ready. Stronger than before.â
Behind them, Erie leaned against the wall, arms crossed and brow raised. âWell, thatâs the first time Iâve seen you hold back when you couldâve played god.â
Vermond paused at the doorway. âGods donât survive long in this galaxy.â
Erie smirked. âFair enough.â
The clone silently followed behind, barefoot but steady, shadowing Vermond like a loyal ghost. Kiana walked beside her brother, their steps matching. The chamber dimmed behind them as they sealed it off.
Above, construction was already underway.
Renn barked orders in the Command Center. Ruen and the frigate crew moved crates, patched walls, rewired terminals, and reinforced key structural supports. The elite undead climbed scaffolding with eerie coordination, welding and assembling like a swarm of machines.
Cargo bays filled with hull plating. Cranes installed turret mounts. Generators hummed stronger by the hour.
Time passed by, the station was no longer a tomb.
For the first time in decadesâperhaps even centuriesâthe air inside the derelict behemoth no longer reeked of rust, rot, and ruin. Every hallway had been scrubbed, cleared, and sterilized. Broken panels were stripped, flickering lights replaced, and hollow echoes replaced by the quiet hum of power surging through fully reconnected conduits.
The elite undead moved with precise coordination, dressed now in maintenance harnesses and wielding brushes, sprayers, and tools. They painted the entire interior of the station a pristine whiteâa sharp contrast to the decay it once held. The stark color wasnât just aestheticâit symbolized something Vermond had decided in silence: this was a new beginning.
The Command Center was spotless. Every screen had been removed and polished or scrapped, save for the one that still bore the Illegal Federation Star Map. It pulsed faintly in the center of the holotable, forbidden symbols etched in light, untouched by time or dust.
Kiana ensured the data core was restructured. Backups. Redundancies. Firewall protections. Her fingers danced across consoles, rerouting systems with a calm smile and soft hums, as if she was weaving a song back into the stationâs soul.
The space farm, once overgrown and forgotten, was now thriving. Rows of fruit-bearing plants reached toward UV lamps, dripping with dew. Ruen discovered it and took it upon himself to trim, clean, and restore it. Now, it produced nutrient-rich fruits in abundanceâsomething the crew hadnât tasted fresh in weeks.
The cafeteria had been cleared of mold and collapsed tables. New alloy benches lined the floor, each one delivered and unpacked by crates from the DryUntilWet. Steam vents hissed as food prep units came back online, and warm meals began circulating for both the living and the eliteâthough the latter only watched, waiting, pretending.
The boarding rooms were now habitable. Beds reassembled. Walls patched. Lights restored. Even the personal lockers had been salvaged, cleaned, and reinstalled.
Water storage was fully operational. Filters still workedâmiraculouslyâand the reserves were untouched by decay. They ran tests for safety. It passed with flying colors. Pure. Cold. Enough for hundreds.
All functional equipment, panels, devices, and scraps of tech across the station had been carefully moved to central storage chambers. Nothing useful was thrown out. Nothing wasted. The elite carried the items in silence, placing them in categorized zones for future reassembly or trade.
And every piece of it⦠every beam, bolt, ration, and tool⦠came from the merchant.
Vermond had offered a single fragment of dark crystalâbarely a sliverâand the merchant accepted the trade with a trembling laugh and stars in his eyes.
âDonât die, Commander Dead-Eyes,â he had said. âI want more trades like that.â
Now, the station gleamed beneath the stars. White. Clean. Alive.
Once sealed by blast doors and buried in dust, it now shimmered with purpose. Vermond stood at the threshold, the reinforced door yawning open behind him as he stepped inside, boots echoing against clean steel.
Rows of dark crystalsâeach pulsing faintly with that strange, soul-fed powerânow lined the chamber. Embedded in secure cases, each shard was stabilized, contained⦠but undeniably dangerous. These were no longer trophies. They were currency, fuel, and weaponsâall in one.
Vermond placed the final crate inside, then stepped back and keyed the internal seal. The vault hissed shut with a low thrum of energy.
Then he pulled a smaller, cut shard from his coatâa sliver no larger than a fingerboneâand returned to the Command Center.
He tapped the holotable. The crystal glowed as he set it in the slot beside the comm relay. Instantly, the encrypted channel burst to life.
The screen flickered. Then the familiar, smug grin of the DryUntilWet merchant captain filled the display.
âWell well, Commander Dead-Eyes. Thought you were gonna vanish for another week. Missed me already?â
Vermond didnât smile. âDefense protocols. Station-wide. I want long-range comms tooâmilitary grade.â
The merchantâs eyes glinted. âYou expecting guests, or planning to shoot stars out of the sky?â
âYes.â
A pause. Then the captain laughed. âYouâre dangerous, I like that.â
Vermond lifted the dark crystal shard into view. âThis much.â
The captainâs breath caught slightly. Even from across the system, the pull of it was palpable.
âIâll prep the load myself,â he said, voice hushed. âYouâll have auto-defense drones, orbital-grade turrets, shield pylons, and a full array of long-range comm buoys. Twenty hours. Dock three.â
The screen cut out before Vermond could respond.
He stared a moment longer, then turned as Kiana entered with a datapad full of structural schematics.
âOrders placed?â she asked.
Vermond nodded once. âWeâre turning this station into a fortress, Kiana.â
Kiana smiled slightly and stood beside him. âOkay, Big brother.â
His eyesâglowing softly. "I wish grandpa was here, seeing this.."
Kiana then holds his hands softly, leaning to his shoulder.
From above the station, the stars continued to shift. Quiet. Watching.
The newly-restored defense system pulsed in green along the Command Center's panels. Lines of fresh paint gleamed under soft lights. Every console, every screen, every port was clean, functional, and connected.
In the corner of the room, Kiana sat on her new couch, legs curled beneath her, a warm cup in her hands. The drink steamed gentlyâa blend of reprocessed sweetleaf and something fruity theyâd salvaged from the old farm storage.
She sipped slowly, watching Vermond in silence.
He stood by the central holotable, arms crossed, that ever-focused look in his glowing eyes. Still, he hadnât noticed sheâd been staring for the last five minutes.
Kiana smiled softly. âBig brother... you never rest, do you?â
Vermond looked back, faintly surprised, then relaxed a little. âI will. Just⦠not yet.â
She leaned over her armrest, holding the cup with both hands. âYou always say that.â
Then she tilted her head with a teasing smirk. âYou look nice when you're serious, you know? Like you're pretending not to care, but you do⦠a lot.â
Vermond chuckled under his breath. âThat obvious?â
âOnly to me.â Her voice dropped gently.
Before he could reply, the station AI pingedâa sharp, clean tone that filled the Command Center.
âAlert: Three unregistered signatures approaching. Velocity suggests scout-class. Designationâunknown, possibly outlaw. Trajectory: vector 9-2, outer perimeter.â
Vermondâs eyes narrowed. âPut them on screen.â
A side monitor blinked to life. Grainy at first, then focusedâthree small fighters, stripped of any legal transponders, their hulls patched together from stolen parts and war scrap. Fast. Light. Likely pirates.
Kiana set her drink aside and stood behind him, arms slipping softly around his waist. âThey picked the wrong station,â she said with a gentle smile against his back.
Meanwhile, in one of the hangars:
Erie grunted, hands buried in an old fighterâs engine array. A couple of the god-tier frigate crew knelt beside him, passing tools and rewiring the flight system.
He wiped his forehead with his sleeve. âAlmost done here. This oneâs still got bones.â
A comm beeped.
âErie,â Vermondâs voice came through. âWeâve got incoming. Three scout-class pirates. Keep those birds groundedâweâll test the new toys first.â
Erie laughed under his breath. âYouâre such a show-off.â
Back in the Command Center, the first auto-turrets rotated with lethal precision. Targeting locks flashed across screens. Shield pylons shimmered faintly.
Vermondâs fingers tapped the command interface.
âLetâs see what these bastards are made of.â
The defense grid ignited like a sleeping beast stirred to anger.
Three glowing lances of energy surged from the stationâs newly-mounted turrets, cutting the void with precise fury. One pirate fighter exploded in a ripple of molten debris. The second tried to dodgeâonly to be impaled mid-spin by an auto-lock missile screaming from beneath the hangarâs teeth.
The thirdâscarred but fastâturned hard and broke off, engines flaring.
Kiana leaned forward, eyes narrowing as the escape path projected. âHeâs going to try and report back. Should weâ?â
Vermond raised a hand.
âNo. Let him run a little.â
The pirate fighter banked wide, heading for a narrow debris field just beyond the stationâs edge. It acceleratedâonly for the debris to suddenly shimmer.
A cloaked podâone of the hidden net-mines dropped earlierâflared to life. It pulsed once.
Then fired a kinetic net, crackling with EMP pulses.
The fleeing pirate never saw it coming.
Slam. The fighter spun wildly, engines shutting down in a flicker of blue.
Vermondâs lips curved. âGot him.â
Ten minutes later, in a sterile hangar deep below the stationâs mid-deck:
The pirate was dragged out of the crumpled cockpit by two elite undead, their eyes pale and patient, their grip like iron. The man kicked once, then went still as he noticed what dragged him.
He was dumped on the floor like cargo.
The chamber's lights flickeredâthen steadied.
Vermond stepped forward from the shadows, flanked by Kiana and Erie.
Kiana folded her arms, expression unreadable. Erie, wiping his hands with a rag, muttered, âNot even five minutes of peaceâ¦â
The pirate coughed. âW-what is this place?â
Vermond knelt, calm. âA future youâre not part of.â
He tapped his finger once on the floorâand the elite undead behind the pirate stepped forward.
Vermondâs voice was soft, but laced with cold purpose. âTalk. Everything. Or Iâll let them study you.â
The pirate looked at Kianaâthen at the undeadâthen at the dozens of emotionless eyes watching from the upper catwalks.
The hangar felt coldâexcept for Kiana, who stood in front of the pirate with her arms folded, sipping a peach-pink drink through a straw. Her white hair shimmered under the overhead lights. Calm. Unbothered.
The pirate stared at her like he'd just seen a celestial goddess descend from orbit.
âIâuhâw-we werenât gonna do anything bad,â he stammered, trying not to make eye contact, then making eye contact, then looking away, then back again. âWe thought this place was abandoned! Just scouting, swear!â
Kiana tilted her head slightly. âYou approached with weapons armed.â
âThat was justâjust protocol! We didn't even lock missiles! Honest!â
Vermond raised an eyebrow from the side. âYou locked one.â
The pirate waved his hands frantically. âThat was a misclick!â
Kiana took another sip and stepped a little closer.
The pirate's breath caught. âOh no, sheâs walkingâwhy is she walkingââ
She leaned in just a little. âYou know what happens to intruders, right?â
âIâlookâokay, listen, if I die right now, I die in the presence of an angel, so thatâs fine, honestly, thatâs fineââ
Erie almost choked on his own laughter from the corner. âOh you are so doomed.â
The pirate held up both hands, still kneeling. âIâll tell you everything! Everything! Coordinates, names, my crewâs favorite soup recipesâwhatever you want!â
Kiana blinked, then whispered to Vermond with a small smirk, âHeâs kind of cute when he panics.â
Vermond side-eyed her. âDonât encourage him. We donât need simps on the prisoner roster.â
The pirate gasped. âIâll simp respectfully!â
Erie doubled over, wheezing.
Kiana knelt down, smiling sweetly. âAlright, Mr. Scout. You're going to give us every detail on your route, your base, your friends, and your communications. Got it?â
He nodded like a bobblehead. âYes, maâam. Absolutely. Maâam. Beautiful maâam.â
Kiana patted his cheek. âGood boy.â
The pirate fainted.
Straight-up fainted.
The pirate groaned awake, eyes fluttering open. Stark white walls. Cold metal bench. Holding cell lights humming above him.
And standing outside the reinforced barrierâKiana, sipping from the same peach-pink drink, twirling her straw absentmindedly.
The pirate jolted upright.
âOh stars, I dreamed about you. You were wearing armor and stepping on my neck.â
Kiana blinked slowly. â...I was wearing what?â
He held his chest dramatically. âYouâve haunted my soul in the best possible way. Am I in trouble? Please say yes.â
Vermondâs voice echoed from the corner speaker. âKiana, remind me why weâre not ejecting this man.â
âBecause heâs very cooperative, Big brother,â she said sweetly, then looked at the pirate. âArenât you?â
The pirate nodded furiously. âMaâam, I will file a monthly tax report for your station if you ask. Iâll scrub every floor. Iâll wear matching uniforms with your crew.â
Kiana squinted. âYouâd serve the crew? The elite scary ones?â
âIf it means seeing your face every day, absolutely.â
Erieâs voice crackled in through comms from engineering: âThis is the weirdest interrogation Iâve ever heard and I once had to threaten a guy using a spoon.â
Kiana tapped the glass. âName?â
âWhatever you want it to be.â
âYour real name.â
âStitch. Call me Stitch.â
âOkay, Stitch,â she said with a small smirk. âYouâre going to tell us everything. And if youâre useful⦠maybe youâll get a real job. On the lowest level. With mops.â
Stitch grinned like heâd just won the lottery. âIt would be an honor, Commander Angel.â
Vermond through the comms: âWeâre going to regret keeping him, arenât we?â
Erie through the comms: âNah. Heâs harmless. Just donât let him near your sister unsupervised.â
Kiana turned to leave, her white hair swaying behind her.
Stitch stared after her dreamily and whispered to himself, âIâm gonna marry that woman.â
The cell door slammed shut behind her.
Minutes later.
Stitch stood at attention, chest puffed out proudly, now wearing a clean (if slightly too large) crew jumpsuit with a mop in one hand and a laminated ID badge around his neck that said:
âProvisionally Indoctrinated Sanitation Officer â Deep Clone Wing.â
Kiana, sipping her drink as usual, handed him a datapad. âThis has everything you told us. Your base coordinates, patrol routes, your old captainâs shoe size. Good boy.â
Stitch beamed. âI just want to be useful to this... beautiful empire of light and terrifying death.â
Erie leaned in from a side corridor. âJust donât touch anything down there. And if one of the pods starts talking to youârun.â
Five minutes later.
Stitch descended into the dim corridors of the clone sector, mop in hand, humming a romantic pirate ballad.
Then he froze.
One of the clone pods was open.
And a fully naked clone was standing in the middle of the chamber, eyes glowing faintly, head tilted like a confused baby bird. Muscles perfectly formed. Not blinking. Just breathing quietly.
Stitchâs mop clattered to the floor.
âOh no. Oh absolutely no.â
The clone turned slowly. Made eye contact.
Stitch put his hands up. âLook, man, Iâm just here to mop floors and maybe win over a girl way out of my league, okay? Donât kill me, donât eat me, donât psychic-punch me.â
The clone took a step forward.
Stitch slowly backed up. âAlright, okay, good talk. Iâll just clean the hallway outside. You seem like you need space. I respect that.â
He slipped out of the room and slammed the door shut behind him.
Over comms: âCommander? Small note. Thereâs a very naked dude awake in Clone Room B. Please advise.â
Vermondâs voice, calm as ever: âDoes he look hostile?â
âHonestly? No. Just⦠majestic and terrifying.â
Erie: âThatâs standard around here.â
Kiana: âGood job, Stitch. You survived your first hour. Promotion pending.â
Stitch slumped against the wall, smiling like an idiot. âBest day of my life.â
Armed with a mop, a bucket, and a nervous smile, Stitch cautiously cracked open the clone sector door and peeked inside.
The clone was still there.
Still very naked.
Still standing perfectly still like a marble statue carved by a god with a six-pack obsession.
Stitch saluted awkwardly. âMorning, Nude-Bro. You, uh⦠look exactly the same as earlier. Thatâs cool. Consistency is key.â
The clone didnât blink.
Stitch mopped around his feet, humming. âYou know, Iâve worked for a lot of bad people. Mean pirates. Smelly ones. Real jerks. But this station? Feels like home. Even they donât glare at me anymore.â
The clone didnât blink.
âBut you⦠youâre different. Like a quiet, living reminder that Iâm definitely not the coolest guy in the room.â
The clone didnât blink.
Stitch leaned on his mop. âIâm gonna bring you pants one day, Nude-Bro. Just you wait.â
Later that evening, in the Command Center, Stitch nervously approached Vermond.
âSir. Requesting⦠um, special permission. Just minor. Micro-permission. Can I give Nude-Bro some pants?â
Vermond, sipping tea beside Kiana, didnât look up. âHe doesn't need clothes unless heâs deployed.â
Kiana leaned over with a smile. âBesides, Stitch. Some statues are meant to be admired.â
Stitch blinked. â...Right. Okay. Got it. Totally normal workplace.â
Erie from the hallway: âDonât fall in love with the clone, Stitch!â
âIâm not! I just respect his vibe!â
Stitch returned at the clone room, mopping the floors to the fullest, meanwhile:
The First Raid
The pirate base hung in the void like a broken toothâchipped, unmonitored, and full of opportunity.
Vermond stood at the front of the breaching craft, the elite undead behind him, rifles gripped and shields humming faintly in their off-hands. They looked humanâuntil you got close. Too still. Too quiet. Too perfect.
The drop ramp hissed open.
âBreach,â Vermond ordered.
They poured in like shadows.
No screams. Just sudden, eerie silence, then blaster fireâcontrolled, precise. The pirates barely had time to realize they were being raided. Some tried to run. Some drew weapons. None lasted more than seconds.
Each time one fell, Vermond's eyes flickered.
132. 133. 134.
He walked among the chaos like a ghost wrapped in command. His coat rippled behind him, a grenade clipped to his belt untouchedâhe didnât need it yet.
They found the first stash inside a loading bay. Crates labeled in old smuggler code: CR-E13 / S13-X energy rifles. A full cache of black-market Federation-grade weaponry.
âTake it,â Vermond said. The undead obeyed without words.
136. 137. 138.
Next bayârefined metals. Stolen alloys, smuggled starboard plating, old fusion-grade scaffolds still in wraps.
Kianaâs voice buzzed in his ear, sweet and calm from the command center. âIâm scanning their inventory logs, Big brother. Youâre gonna love whatâs on deck four.â
âCopy. Moving now,â he said, stepping over a twitching pirate trying to crawl away. His boot came down without pause.
139.
Erieâs voice chimed in dryly. âIâm watching this live. Honestly? Youâre terrifying.â
âGood,â Vermond said.
Deck four was quiet.
One last resistance squad tried a last stand behind overturned storage crates. They shouted. Vermond raised his hand. The elite raised their rifles.
Five clean shots.
144.
By the time the base was purged, the station had gained:
A full crate of smuggled energy rifles
Seven pallets of reinforced plating and hull metals
Three dead pirate comms routers (salvageable)
And thirteen more souls in Vermondâs eyes.
Back on the station, Stitch watched the returning ship from the hangar.
âYep,â he said. âTotally not in love with the boss either.â
And here it comes, the second raid.
The briefing room buzzed softly with holo-projections and strategy overlays. Vermond stood silently, reviewing the stolen data Stitch had given themâmaps, patrol routes, entry codes. All taken from the pirate base where Stitchâs former crew still festered.
They were bigger. Better armed. A deeper fortress tucked inside a hollowed asteroid with automated turrets and some psychic brute leading the lot.
But Vermond had one advantage: he didnât need to breathe, and neither did his army.
Down in the cafeteria, Stitch stirred something foul in a plastic cup and slowly slid onto the bench beside Kiana. She was focused on her datapad, reviewing shield module calibrations.
He leaned in.
âHey, uh⦠just so you know. My old boss is kinda a mind-reader freak. Not exactly stable. Loves controlling people like puppets and screaming into their heads. Also tried to turn me into a lampshade once. So, uhâ¦â
She blinked, looking up at him with her usual polite expression.
ââ¦you might wanna tell your brother to keep his thoughts tight and his team tighter. Not that I care what happens to him or the other guys. I just think youâre pretty cool. And I donât wanna mop your exploded guts off the clone room floor.â
Kiana raised a brow. âThatâs sweet, Stitch.â
âIâm trying.â
She reached out and gently patted his head. âThank you for warning me. Iâll be careful.â
He looked dazed for a second.
âI am⦠dangerously attracted to kindness,â he whispered, then snapped back to reality. âAnyway! Bye! Time to clean awkward nudity.â
He darted off toward the lower halls, where the nude clone still stood motionless, unblinking.
Back upstairs, Kiana tapped her comms.
âBig brother?â
âMm?â
âStitch says their boss is a psychic.â
A pause.
âInteresting,â Vermond said, his voice cold.
The planning table dimmed.
âWeâll bring the neural dampeners.â
And the second raid began to take formâdarker, sharper, and far more dangerous than the first.
Here comes the second raid:
The Undead Destroyer loomed above the asteroid like a silent omen. Docked at its underbelly, the stealth boarding tube extendedâclamping into the hidden access shaft Stitch had described.
No alarms. No movement. Not yet.
Vermond led them inâsix elite undead, disguised in Suits and gears, moving with perfect silence. They didnât breathe. Didnât blink. Just followed.
Inside was rot.
The base was dark metal and cheap lighting. Smuggled crates stacked along walls. Graffiti. Bones. A mess of vice and filth. But more than thatâit was wrong. The air trembled. Whispers licked the edge of thought. Like something was listening.
âHeâs awake,â Vermond muttered. His dark and light emerald eye flickered.
They moved floor by floor, silencing lookouts before they could breathe out a warning. Each kill was clean. Permanent.
144. 151. 167.
An elite lobbed a grenade through a barracks door. Screams cut short. Smoke curled into silence.
Kianaâs voice crackled in Vermondâs earpiece. âBig brother, Sub-reactor located. Iâve hijacked their comms. Theyâre blind.â
172. 181. 190.
They reached the central chamber.
There, atop a throne of scrap and bloodied bones, sat the Boss.
No helmet. Just pale, bald flesh and deep veins pulsing across his scalp. His eyes were milky white. A psionic amplifier fused into his spine. Dozens of pirates surrounded him, trembling. Not from fearâbut from the hold he had on their minds.
âYou reek of the Void,â the Boss said aloud, his voice echoing through their skulls.
Vermondâs eye hit 200.
âGood,â Vermond said softly. âThen you know what comes next.â
The psychic screamedâfilling the room with pressure, a mental quake meant to shatter sanity.
But Vermondâs hand moved like a godâs. He raised the shard of dark crystal embedded in his chest and willed the silence to fall.
The undead surged forward, rifles blazing. The psionicâs scream turned into a gurgle as Vermond hurled a grenade into the throne.
Boom.
Smoke. Heat. Silence.
213.
Only one voice remained.
âI told her heâd kill you,â Stitch said over the comms, sipping something disgusting from a thermos. âRIP, boss. You were always a creep.â
The base was now empty.
And the crates⦠full of illegal goods. Black tech, captured AI cores, rare metals, gene-serums, psionic dampeners, and enough raw fuel to power the station for years.
Vermond stood over the smoldering throne, eyes glowing bright with unnatural light. The number 213 burned in his gaze.
âKiana,â he said over the comms.
âMm?â
âPrep the vault. We bring everything home.â
âYes, big brother,â she whispered sweetly. âAlready warming up the landing pad.â
The docking clamps locked with a loud clang as the raiding team stepped off the shuttle. Vermond led the packâhis coat dusted in ash, his emerald eyes glowing with the fresh count: 213. Behind him, the elite undead walked like a squad of ghosts, arms heavy with secured crates. One carried a scorched helmet, another dragged a busted psionic amplifier by the wires.
The airlock hissed open.
â...I swear, if this soup is recycled again, Iâm flipping the entireââ Renn paused mid-rant, spoon halfway to his mouth.
Ruen glanced up, mouth full. âHuh.â
Around them, the rest of the god-tier frigate crew sat in the cafeteria, trays in front of them, half of them mid-conversation. The atmosphere shifted fast as the group saw Vermond emerge like a myth made flesh.
He was silent, stained in black soot and something darker.
One of the elite undead dropped a crate in the center of the floor with a deep metallic thud. A moment later, the others followed. Another dropped what looked like a severed control panel, sparking faintly.
Erie trailed behind, chewing on some mystery meat from a stick. âWe brought souvenirs,â he said casually. âGuess which one was psionic.â
Vermond didnât speak. He simply raised his handâand the nude clone then came up, stepping forward from behind the group. Still bare, still eerily perfect. Human to the eye, but his blank stare and slow, obedient movements told another story.
One of the frigate crew choked on his drink.
âDamnâ Renn said, standing now, his face unreadable.
Kiana skipped in, perfect timing, a tray in hand and a steaming cup of something peach-colored. She walked straight to Vermond, slid her free arm into his, and smiled. âBig brother brought us a throne made of bones and tech. Isnât he just the best?â
Ruen blinked. âA throne?â
âOh yeah. Exploded it too,â Erie said, grabbing a drink from someone elseâs tray and taking a sip.
The clone stood unmoving beside Vermond, while behind them, crates were dragged toward the stationâs elevator. Loot, weapons, resourcesâenough to rebuild twice over.
Vermondâs eyes shifted briefly to Renn.
âFoodâs cold,â he said, voice low.
Renn looked down at his tray. Then up again. âYouâre insane.â
âAnd winning,â Kiana added brightly, clinking her cup against Vermondâs hip. âBig brother is just the best.â
The elevator doors parted with a soft chime, revealing crates stacked high, labeled in fractured pirate codes and charred insignias. Inside the cargo hall, the god-tier frigate crew had already cleared space. Stitch, now wearing a stolen security cap two sizes too big, saluted dramatically before tripping over a stray wrench.
âLoot delivery!â he shouted. âTwelve crates, mostly weapons, three smuggled tech blocks, one crate labeled definitely not cursed, and a box of what I think are alien noodles!â
Ruen caught the noodles before they hit the floor. âScore.â
Old man Renn popped open a weapons crate and whistled low. âThese are Federation-issue... second gen disruptor rifles. These bastards have better stockpiles than some warships.â
Behind him, two elite undead silently lifted a massive crate of metals into the corner, perfectly coordinated, silent as machines. One nodded to Stitch, who beamed like he was suddenly part of a team he never applied to.
âI got it, I got it!â Stitch rushed over with a datapad. âLogs say these alloys are ship-grade. Reinforce the entire station with âemâmaybe even that weird clone lab!â
Renn grunted. âYouâre not completely useless after all.â
Stitch saluted again. âThank you, sir. Now where do I dump the possibly haunted circuit boards?â
âGive them to Ruen.â
âFigures.â
Above it all, in the now gleaming Command Center, Vermond sat back on the new, white-cushioned lounge couch Kiana had claimed as hers. He didnât moveâhis coat half-unbuttoned, boots dusted from the raid, eyes closed.
Kiana sat beside him, brushing dirt from his jacket with soft fingers. His head rested gently on her lap, the emerald glint of his eyes dim and steady.
âYou were reckless again, Big brother,â she murmured, though her tone was more fond than scolding.
âIâm tired,â Vermond muttered.
âI know.â She leaned down, her hair brushing his forehead. âYou brought us back whole. Thatâs what matters.â
He didnât reply. Just let the warmth of her presence ease the burning ache in his chest.
She quietly placed a warm drink on the armrest, then resumed running her fingers through his hair.
âYou can sleep here,â she whispered. âIâll wake you if anything tries to kill us.â
Back in the half-lit dock, Erie cursed as sparks flew from an open panel.
âWhy the hell are these circuits color-coded in shades of regret?â
He glanced over to the sixth fighter, partially reassembled, wires everywhere. Then back to the tools. He grinned to himself and wiped the grease from his face with the sleeve of his shirt.
âStill beats listening to those two upstairs.â
He gave the nearest fighter a pat. âCome on, you old beast. Weâve got a war to plan.â
Then came the Strategic Awakening.
Vermondâs eyes flickered open, their twin emerald hues glowing faintlyâ213. The number glinted in the dim light of the Command Center as he slowly sat up from his sisterâs lap. Kiana gave him a soft smile but said nothing, simply running a hand once through his hair before letting him rise.
He moved toward the central holo-table, boots silent on the pristine floor. With a gentle touch of his hand, the console thrummed to life, casting ghost-blue light across the walls as a massive star map unfolded like ink in water.
The Illegal Federation Map.
Its data web expanded, tracing the fractured remains of old dominionsânames that once meant order and strength now little more than fading echoes. Whole sectors blinked like dying stars.
Kiana stepped beside him, sipping from her mug, eyes narrowing at the shifting data.
âBig brother,â she murmured, voice low. âAll those red zone, thatâs not random collapse.â
Vermondâs fingers moved again, zooming into the Outlaw Sectors. Sector after sector blinked and vanished beneath creeping red tendrils.
âThe Folkan,â he said under his breath. âTheyâre not just invading... theyâre consuming. The Federation's gone. And now theyâre coming for everything else.â
Kiana folded her arms, her usual warmth muted with thought. âBig brother, If they reach deeper into outlaw space, weâll be cornered. Nobodyâs stopping them. Nobody even knows how.â
Vermond nodded grimly. âWe canât match them. Not like this. A handful of fighters, a hidden station, a small amount of elite undeadsâ¦â
He paused.
âBut we have options.â
The map shifted againâhighlighting the Kore Resource Territory. It glowed bright green, a pocket of untouched wealth just a few jumps away.
âRich in alloys, fusion cores, vault-grade wiring⦠and abandoned since the war,â he said. âWe need that. Not just for weaponsâbut for building. Big ships. Real ones.â
Down in the docking bay, Erieâs voice crackled through the comms. âIâm listening.â
âErie,â Vermond said, leaning slightly over the table. âWeâve got to upgrade the bays. They can make small ships now, but weâll need more. Something larger. Durable. And lethal.â
Erie snorted. âSo, dreadnoughts. Cool. No pressure.â
âWe need a proper engineer,â Kiana added, tapping the side of the console. âOne thatâs alive. And not stitched together by scraps.â
âI resemble that remark,â Erie muttered.
She smiled. âWeâll get you help, Erie.â
âAnd the blueprints,â Vermond said, eyes focused. âNot fragments. Federation-grade. Complete. Weâll pull them out of black markets if we have to. Or out of Folkan wreckage.â
Kiana gave a nod, gaze sharpening. âItâs a start.â
The map slowly dimmed, but its data was burned into their minds. Kiana leaned in, her voice soft near Vermondâs ear.
âBig brother, we canât build a new future by hiding in the dark, can we?â
Vermond looked at herâthen to the crew behind them, the elite undead assembling supplies in silent precision. One of the frigate crew stood with Stitch, pointing at crates. Even now, this place pulsed with new life.
âNo,â Vermond said. âWeâll carve one out. From metal. From fire. And from death itself.â
He turned to face them all.
âThis station will be the heart of it. A forge for war. A place to build what we need to survive whatâs coming.â
Erieâs voice came back, more serious now. âAnd when we do⦠you planning to take the fight to them?â
Vermondâs eyes burned brighterâ213, etched in divine and demonic emerald light.
âOh, Erie. Weâre not going to take the fight to themâ¦â
He stepped down from the platform, a faint smile curling on his lips.
âWeâre going to drag it from their cold, dying hands.â
And somewhere in the dark again, the watcher smiled.