Vermond lay in the grass near the treeline, the sky above him painted with stars he didnât recognize. The alien constellations blinked coldly, like a thousand eyes watching, judging. The silence around him felt deeper nowânot haunting, but almost thoughtful. The wind had returned in gentle gusts, brushing his hair as if trying to comfort him.
His hands rested over his chest, where the glowing orb pulsed slowly, almost as if it were breathing with him.
The number in his eyes still remained. 48.
He heard them again. The voices. Some begged. Some cursed. Some just screamed endlessly in broken tongues.
He squeezed his eyes shut, as if that would drown them out. It didnât.
But thenâthrough the screamingâone voice rose clearly. Old. Warm. Familiar.
âVermond...â
He sat up slightly. He remembered that voice. Grandpa.
âNo matter what happens, Vermond... no matter how dark it gets, you must always think positive. Always. Thatâs how you survive. Not just with strengthâbut with your will. Youâve got that from me. You do everything you can to survive, whether you have something left or not. Whether you're scared, alone, or broken. You push forward. You crawl if you must. You bleed if you have to. But you never stop.â
Vermond felt his breath catch. His fists clenched the grass.
He whispered, âGrandpaâ¦â
That sparkâso smallâignited something inside him.
He stood. Not like a hero rising from triumphâbut like a beast dragging itself up after being beaten. He wasnât strong. Not yet. But he had something just as dangerous: purpose.
He turned to face the open clearing, the bits of scorched hull, the debris of the Corvette. His futureâhis salvagerâs lifeâwas buried beneath that ruin.
And he was going to take it back.
He spent the next hoursâor maybe days, heâd lost track of timeâtrying to control his power. Not just the orb, not just the hunger for souls. But the thing growing inside him. The voices. The pull.
He meditated near the wreckage. Screamed in frustration. Tried focusing his energy, reaching out like he once saw in vids of psionic users. He mimicked what he thought control looked like.
Nothing worked.
Sometimes the orb pulsed faintly. Sometimes he saw flickers in the airâshadows of hands, of runes, of something clawing at reality.
But no matter what he did, it always felt like trying to hold water in his hands. Slipping. Refusing.
Vermond growled, sweat dripping down his body. He punched a twisted bulkhead, denting the metal.
Still, he refused to stop.
He would learn this power.
He would find a way off this planet.
He would rebuild his grandpaâs ship.
And no matter what was happening inside him, no matter the monster clawing from withinâ¦
He would survive.
The sky dimmed as if the world itself was holding its breath. Vermond stood before the forestâs edge, his pulse steady yet his instincts screaming otherwise. The wind had died, the air grown thick with a silence that felt... watched. Still, something deep within called him forwardâa magnetic whisper threading through the trees, tugging at the core of his soul.
He pressed onward.
Branches clawed at his skin, leaves whispered forgotten truths, and the number 48 shimmered in his emerald-glowing eyes. And then⦠he found it.
Half-buried under moss and twisting roots, a jagged structure loomed in the heart of the forest. Black stone, ancient and alien, pulsed faintly with a sickly green hue. It wasnât the orbâs power. This was something else. Something older.
As he stepped inside, the air changed. The walls hummed with a language his mind couldnât translate, and the corridors twisted unnaturallyâas if the structure didnât want to be understood.
Then came the sound.
Not footsteps. Not breath.
Something⦠wet.
Vermondâs head snapped to the side as a figure stepped from the shadows. No, not a figureâa thing. Eight limbs, shifting eyes, bone spirals across flesh like armor. The unknown species hissed, its presence radiating primal fury.
He backed away, fists clenched, the orb dim and unresponsive. "I don't want to fight you," he saidâvoice shaking, yet steady.
But survival didnât ask for peace.
The creature lunged.
Vermond moved on instinct, barely dodging a swipe that shattered a nearby wall. He countered with a punch that cracked boneâbut his control faltered. He tried to summon his power⦠nothing. The rage, the hunger, all of it locked inside him with no key.
The fight turned brutal.
He bled. He screamed. But he fought.
Every blow he gave was desperation. Every dodge was a prayer to live another second. The creature struck his chest and sent him tumbling. He rolled back to his feet, panting, eyes glowing brighter.
"Grandpaâ¦" he whispered. "I will survive."
And then, as if something answered his resolve, a strange ripple pulsed through the structureâhis body momentarily moving with more clarity, more purpose. He didn't master it⦠but something opened.
With one final charge, he pierced the creatureâs chest with a broken spike of the structure, snarling through gritted teeth as the alien let out a hideous, wet shriek. It collapsed. Silent.
Vermond dropped beside it, gasping, hands shaking.
He was alive.
But deep within the temple⦠the call grew louder.
Vermondâs boots scraped against the stone floor, each step deeper into the structure feeling heavier than the last. The air had changed. It was thicker, pulsing like breath from a dying beast. Shadows bent wrong on the walls, some stretching even when there was no light.
He passed through a vast corridor, lined with statues that stared down at him with eyeless faces. His orb glowed faintly, reactingânot with hunger, but fear.
Then... it hit.
A soundless tremor shook the walls. Something shifted. And then it emerged from the black ahead.
The creature was tall, slick, almost translucent. Limbs too long, too thin. No face. It didnât roar. It didnât snarl. It spoke by pressing down on Vermondâs thoughts. An emotional weight filled his skull like a scream underwater. Arrogance. Contempt. You are nothing.
Vermond raised his hand, and the crimson flare of power pulsed out of his palmâwild, powerful, uncontrolled. The blast lit up the corridor, searing stone.
But the creature was behind him now.
A strike to the ribs. Bones cracked.
Vermond slammed into the wall, blood trailing from his mouth. He tried again, but his power flared sidewaysâripping apart a support beam, not the enemy. The creature moved like a nightmare, dancing through his rage like it was air.
Another hit. Then another.
He was on the ground now, coughing, eyes burning. The number in them flickeredââ48.â A mockery. A joke.
He muttered his grandpaâs words under his breath through pain:
âWhatever happens⦠always think positive. Do everything you can to survive. No matter what the situation is. Even if you lose hope, or donât know who you areâsurvive.â
Blood stained his hands. His breath came in gasps. He wanted to control it. The power. The chaos inside.
But he couldnât.
The creature stepped forward. It was about to end it.
And then⦠light.
A glow from deep inside the corridor. Not warm. Not safe. But ancient. Alien.
The creature paused, hissing in a language older than time. It backed away. Retreating.
Vermond, barely holding on, dragged himself forward with shaking arms. Toward the light.
Toward the artifact.
And it watched him approachâlike it had been waiting for this moment all along.
Vermondâs hands trembled as he reached the center of the chamber. The light didnât warm himâit pierced him. It felt as though his soul was being peeled open, layer by layer, memories unspooling without his permission.
In the center stood the artifact.
A floating shardâimpossibly shaped, neither crystal nor metal. It hummed, alive. As if it had a heartbeat. As if it remembered him.
Then came the voice.
Not in his ears.
In his mind.
âYou were chosen, long before the blood. Before the hunger.â
Vermondâs vision twisted. He was standing in a sea of stars, and around him, thousands of shattered orbs floated like dead suns. Images assaulted himâhis grandpaâs laughter, Kianaâs eyes, Fredeneâs last breath, his own hands dripping in crimson.
He screamed, dropping to his knees.
âYou do not wield power. Power wields you.â
âBut if you survive, you may turn the chain.â
Then it hit.
A wave of pain surged through his skull as the artifact pulsed with sick light. A test. Not a battle of strengthâbut of control.
The ground beneath him cracked. Blood ran from his nose, ears, and the corners of his eyes. The orb on his chest blazed with fury, resistingâlike it knew this force threatened its dominance.
His body thrashed, veins bulging, the number in his eye glowing violentlyââ48â surged, flickering as if trying to hold its form.
Then voicesâevery soul he consumedâwhispering, screaming, begging, laughing.
But above all⦠his grandpaâs voice returned.
âRemember who you are, Vermond. You are not the hunger. You are not the death. Youâre the boy who fixed ships with grease-covered hands and stars in his eyes. Youâre my grandson. You are Vermond.â
He screamed, pushing forward, one hand outstretched. The power inside him clawed for control.
But for the first timeâ¦
He pushed back.
And the artifact⦠accepted him.
The chamber exploded in light. Vermondâs body convulsed, then fell still.
Moments passed.
When he stood again, blood-drenched and wide-eyed, his vision was clearer. His muscles steadier. His mindâ¦
Quieter.
He wasnât in control yet.
But for the first time since it all beganâ¦
He was closer.
And now, deep in the structure, a new door opened.
Something else waited for him.
Something worse.
The stone door cracked open with a grinding, ancient soundâlike the planet itself was exhaling for the first time in eons. Beyond it⦠only darkness. The kind that felt wet, crawling up your skin, whispering into your bones.
Vermond stepped forward, the artifactâs glow dimming behind him.
He wasnât alone.
The corridor breathed.
The silence wasnât empty. It was watching.
He walked slowly, careful not to let the hunger rise. His eyes still pulsed with that haunting numberââ48ââa glowing mark of the souls heâd stolen. The artifact helped steady him, but the orb still burned in defiance, angry, jealous.
Thenâ
Skittering.
At first, faint.
Then louder.
Then closer.
A blur moved across the wallsâthen another. Something insectoid, but wrong. Thin limbs, spines, bone plates shifting like armor. One dropped in front of him.
Its face opened vertically. No eyes. Just a screeching maw lined with dozens of twitching tongues.
Vermond clenched his fists. No time to run.
The creature lunged.
CRACK!
He sidestepped, slamming his elbow into its spineâonly to watch it twist unnaturally mid-air, slicing toward him with a tail-blade.
Slash.
Blood splattered the wall. Vermond staggered, panting.
They were fast.
Three more dropped in behind the first. They chattered in clicks, surrounding him.
But then Vermondâs eyes glowed red.
The â48â flaredâbecoming â49.â
He didnât know how he did it.
His body just moved.
In a flash, he was behind the first.
Crack.
Its neck broke.
Another leaptâhe caught it mid-air and crushed it against the wall.
The last hissed and backed away, only for Vermondâs foot to slam down on its spine.
âFifty,â he whispered, trembling.
He wasnât breathing heavilyâhe was trembling in rage and fear.
Was he still him?
Or was he becoming them?
As he stood among the corpses, the wall at the end of the corridor slowly slid open, revealing a massive chamberâ¦
Glowing glyphs.
Dozens of sarcophagi.
And in the center, floating above an altarâanother piece of the unknown. Not the artifact this time.
But something older.
Something that pulsed with a deep, forbidden hunger.
And from the shadowsâ¦
A voice spoke:
âYou are the heir of the Black Veins⦠We have waited long for your awakening.â
The sound of his own breathing echoed through the stone walls, raspy and broken. Vermondâs body scraped against the ancient floor as somethingâno, someoneâdragged him deeper into the structure.
He had lost. His chest burned, ribs possibly broken, his blood now part of the dust. The orb on his chest dimmed, flickering like a dying star.
Thenâsilence.
His body was dropped. Vermond gasped, curling slightly, trying to sit up. His arms trembled. The faint blue glow lining the hallway was the only source of light. The creature that beat him was gone. Or watching. He couldnât tell.
Then⦠it spoke.
A whisper from nowhere. âYou fear yourself more than me.â
Vermond's eyes widened. He tried to stand, but a jolt of pain chained him to the ground.
âYou crawl like a beast... and yet you hold the soul of a king,â the voice said againâthis time deeper, layered, as if multiple voices spoke through one throat.
Then, from the darkness ahead, it emerged. Not the creature that fought him. This was⦠a machine, or a monument? Noâan artifact. Floating, pulsating with a soft, eerie hum. It resembled a heart made of obsidian and bone, suspended mid-air, wrapped in chains of light that flickered in and out of existence.
His blood⦠reacted.
The orb on his chest trembled violently, as if it recognized the artifact. But they were not the same. This thing⦠it was older.
Vermond crawled toward it. Inch by inch, pain like fire searing through him. Voices chanted in his earsâsome from the past, some not even human. And just before he could touch the artifactâ
âhe was pulled into a vision.
He saw himself. Not as he was, but as he could be. Towering. Cloaked in a flowing black and violet mantle. A crown of bones. Behind him, the galaxy burnedâand yet, his face was calm, eyes glowing emerald. No longer lost.
No longer human.
The vision shattered.
He was back, lying on the ground before the artifact. But now⦠it had changed.
It opened.
Like an eye.
Vermond screamed as tendrils of light and shadow stabbed into his head, pouring memories into him that werenât hisâknowledge, instincts, control.
He convulsed.
He screamed again.
And thenâ
Silence.
When he opened his eyes, everything was different. His pain dulled. His breath steadied. He could feel the raw forces inside himânot tamed, but caged⦠for now.
A voice echoed once more. âYou may walk again, Necromancer.â
Vermond stood.
His fingers clenched. His eyes still burned with the number 48âbut he could sense every soul inside him now. Their screams. Their strength.
Vermondâs breath was ragged, body pressed against the damp, moss-covered stone wall of the structureâs corridor. The creature he had just slain still lay motionless behind him, its twisted limbs twitching in postmortem spasms. Bloodâthick, black, and oilyâcoated the floor in grotesque patterns, almost forming unfamiliar runes beneath the flickering bioluminescent moss overhead.
The orb on his chest had dulled, no longer glowingâbut Vermondâs eyes, now marked with the number 48, glared with unsteady resolve. His muscles ached, his mind was a fog of survival instinct and echoing voices. He hadnât even realized what he was doing during the fight. His body had moved like a stormâwild, feral, unchained.
Something deeper had taken over... something he couldnât name.
And yet, the call remained. A pull. Not physical, not entirely mental eitherâbut a force... from the artifact deeper within this ancient place.
He forced himself up, groaning, fingers brushing over gashes in his side. âNo control⦠not yet,â he muttered, gripping the hilt of a salvaged blade. âBut Iâm not done.â
As he limped forward, the corridor widened into a strange chamberâa circular arena of sorts, wrapped in spiraling stone. Above, floating like a black sun, was a pulsing orbânot his. Not like the one fused to his body. This one crackled with unknown energy, and in front of it stood a shadow.
Another beast.
No, not a beast.
A guardian.
It turnedâeight crimson eyes glowing with unnatural light, its flesh draped in bone-like armor, hands ending in jagged claws. It didn't roar. It didn't screech.
It whispered.
âYou are not ready.â
Vermond grit his teeth, the visions returning again. Kianaâs scream. Fredeneâs dying face. His hands dripping in soulfire. He screamedânot in rage, but defianceâand charged.
Vermondâs breath caught.
He tried to channel power from the orb, but it flickered, unstable. His vision split. The number 48 in his eyes began to glitch, warping, fading in and out.
The monster lunged.
He blocked with his arms, but the claws tore through his flesh like it was paper. Blood splashed against the walls. Vermond was tossed like a ragdoll, crashing into a pillar. His ribs cracked.
He got up.
His body shook. His instincts told him to fight. His soul told him to survive.
But his control slipped again.
He screamedâmore beast than manâand lunged. The two collided in a brutal clash of will and rage. The creature struck again and again, slicing through his side. Vermond struck back, soul energy erupting violently, too uncontrolled, too raw.
The corridor shook. The walls split open.
In the end, it wasn't the creature that ended it.
It was his own power.
His energy explodedâviolent, untamed, uncontrolledâand engulfed both of them. Vermond screamed. The world turned white.
Then... silence.
He lay there. His eyes stared upward, lifeless. The orb on his chest dimmed, and the number was gone.
No heartbeat. No breath.
Dead.
For what felt like eternity, there was only blackness. Silence. Nothingness.
But then⦠warmth. A spark.
A voice.
âVermond...â
It was his grandfatherâs voice again, but not in memoryâthis time, it reached deep into the void.
âYou carry more than your guilt. You carry the weight of lives, the threads of souls. You are not lost yet, boy. But you must choose⦠will you let the darkness consume you, or will you master it?â
The void shivered.
The orb glowed faintly.
His eyes snapped open.
He gasped.
He was alive.
He sat up, covered in dust and blood, the air still, the corridor broken. Around him, silence. The creatureâs remains were scattered⦠but something pulsed aheadâa dull hum calling to him.
The artifact.
And in his soul, something was different. He had died. But something had brought him back.
And nowâ¦
Something had changed forever.
Vermond's legs trembled beneath him as he walked, the pain dulled but not gone. His body felt heavier nowânot from wounds, but from something deeper. The place where his heart had once raced in fear now pulsed with eerie calm.
He stepped over the torn remains of the creature he had destroyed through sheer force and death. The structure beyond it opened into a spiraling stairwell, carved in strange, seamless black stone. Faint green symbols shimmered on the wallsârunes he couldnât read, but they felt ancient⦠purposeful.
Each step downward echoed like a whisper of the dead.
And at the bottomâ
A door.
No handle. No seam. Just a flat, towering surface of polished obsidian, with a jagged crack glowing emerald at its center. As he approached, the orb on his chest responded. It pulsed softly once⦠then went dark.
The crack opened.
And beyond itâ
A chamber.
The chamber was vast and circular, with massive curved walls covered in veins of glowing runes. In the middle stood a pedestal⦠and on it, the artifact.
It floated slightly above the stone baseâa shard of something crystalline, jagged like a broken star. Its glow wasnât harsh like the orbâsâit was softer, ethereal, like thought made visible.
But the moment Vermond stepped inside, the chamber reacted.
Walls twisted. The air became heavy. Whispers slithered in from all directionsâwords he couldnât understand, but they filled his mind with pressure. His vision blurred again. The memories returnedâKianaâs scream, Fredeneâs face, the screams of dying soldiersâ¦
You killed them.
The voices pressed harder.
He clutched his head. He staggered toward the artifact.
You were never meant to live.
He fell to his knees.
But then he rememberedâhis grandfatherâs voice, from beyond death.
> âYou are not lost yet. You must choose.â
He stood.
He reached for the artifact.
The moment his fingers touched it, the shard shattered into light, streaming into his bodyânot into the orb, not into his soulâbut his mind.
And everything stopped.
He floated in a space of light and dark, where time meant nothing. And for the first time, Vermond felt his power. Not the madness. Not the hunger. But the structure behind it. Threads, strings, patterns of energy. It was as if the artifact granted him a map of his own inner chaos.
He understood.
Not fullyâbut just enough.
Control.
Clarity.
Balance.
He awoke again in the chamber, gasping. The shard was gone. But he felt it within him now, humming like a second heartbeat in his mind.
He looked at his hand.
No longer trembling.
The orb still glowed.
The number in his eyes still said 48.
But for the first timeâ
He wasnât afraid of it.
Vermond sat cross-legged on the moss-covered floor inside the hollow chamber of the ancient structure. The shadows no longer threatened him, and the strange whispers that once clawed at his mind had fallen silent. Outside, the forest hummed with its usual eerie stillnessâbut here, for the first time in what felt like forever, he could hear himself.
The number 48 still burned faintly in his eyes like a scar on the soul, but the storm of chaos within him had calmedâtamed by the artifact now embedded against his chest like a second heart.
He closed his eyes, slowly inhaling the cool, metallic air. His heartbeat echoed in sync with something deeper, more ancient. He stretched out his sensesâat first aimlesslyâbut then focused. He could hear. Everything.
The distant rustling of leaves. The snap of a twig beneath an insect. The gentle rhythm of water dripping deep within the temple's inner ruins.
He opened his eyes again, slowly raising his hand. For the first time, his movement wasnât erratic, like before when raw power burned without purpose. Now, his fingers obeyed. His limbs followed his intent, not the chaos.
He stood, took a step forward, then anotherâtesting balance, precision, even silence.
A pulse vibrated in his spine. He felt a flicker of energy, and with just a breath, the orb on his chest gave a soft hum. Not a roar of powerâjust acknowledgment. He could command it, slightly, like reining in a wild beast, though the leash was still frayed.
He remembered his grandfatherâs words, echoing stronger now:
> "No matter how far you fall, Vermond⦠even in the void, you find ground. Even in madness, you find yourself. Keep going. Surviveânot just for your sake, but because youâre still you beneath it all."
The memory settled like warm light in his chest.
Vermond picked up a chunk of stone nearby and tossed it high into the air.
It fellâbut before it could hit the ground, he moved. A blur. Swift. Controlled. His palm caught it, fingers curled around it gently.
Not destruction. Not rage. Control.
He let out a breath, his lips curling into the faintest smirk.
"Alright," he whispered to himself. "Letâs see what I can really do."
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From deep within the ruins, the silence stirred againâbut this time, it wasnât horror.
It was anticipation.
The air shifted.
Vermond paused, his foot halfway through a step. A stillness fell over the forestânot silence, but expectation, like the entire world was holding its breath.
He slowly turned toward the trees. The massive trunks loomed like the pillars of forgotten gods, their shadows long and dripping with mist. Nothing moved. Yet every instinct in Vermond screamed.
He was being watched.
Not by an animal. Not by a person. By something else.
His enhanced senses trembled on the edge of awareness. A prickling ran up his spine like a trail of cold fire. No sound. No movement. But his heartbeat quickened.
The forest didnât feel like it had before.
He stared into the darkness beneath the trees⦠and for the briefest moment, something stared back.
Two slits of faint lightânot eyes, not trulyâbut reflective like polished bone. They vanished the moment he noticed them. A whisper of motion, a rustle in the branches⦠and then silence again.
Vermond took a step back.
> "Donât move."
The voice was not his own. It wasnât the voices in his head. It was something⦠external. Foreign. Calm, commanding, and very, very old.
He spun around, looking for the source, but there was nothing. Only his breath, puffing in the chilled air.
> "It sees you now."
That one was in his mindâbut it wasnât like the ones that whispered when he consumed. It was deeper. Malevolent. Watching not just his body⦠but his soul.
He backed toward the structure, eyes darting through the trees. The orb at his chest flickered, sensing the presence, pulsing with anxiety like a trapped animal.
And thenâ
A shape moved.
It was tall, too tall, with limbs too thin. Cloaked in shadows and impossible geometry, it clung to the trees, its head cocked sideways like a curious predator.
Vermond reached for his power.
But nothing answered.
Not the orb. Not the artifact. Not the strength heâd just begun to control.
The creature only tilted its head again, a silent mockery of a greeting, and then faded into the treesâlike it had never been there.
Vermond stood frozen, his breath sharp in his throat.
Whatever this thing wasâ¦
It didnât just watch him.
It knew him.
The wind had stilled hours ago.
Vermond sat at the edge of his shelter, his back against a tree twisted by time and silence. The clearing he'd made in the forest looked peacefulâtoo peaceful. The grass swayed like something alive, not moved by air, but by presence.
He stared at the leaves above, their veins casting sharp shadows over his face. The number â48â glowed softly in his eyes, like tiny candles refusing to go out.
And beneath that quiet, something watched.
The presence didnât speak, not with words.
It breathed through the cracks in his thoughts.
At first, Vermond tried to ignore it.
He sharpened a jagged piece of metal into a tool.
He checked the perimeter.
He ate.
He counted stars.
But even as he chewed, even as he swallowed, he felt it.
Something was watching him.
No footsteps.
No shadows.
Just... awareness. A pressure behind the eyes, like a second soul peering through the lens of his own body.
That night, he slept.
And the dreams were worse.
Not of fire, nor of blood. But of himselfâsitting on a throne made of bone and shipwrecks, cloaked in robes stitched from Federation flags and pirate coats. Kiana was there, head bowed, whispering. Her voice was hollow. Her lips moved but made no sound.
And above them, behind a veil of stars, two eyes opened.
Eyes that did not blink. Eyes that did not close.
He jolted awake, breath sharp, hand clutching the dirt like a lifeline.
âItâs watching meâ¦â he muttered, his voice cracking under the weight of truth.
From the forest, there was no sound.
But a tree branch shiftedânot by wind.
No breeze had stirred in hours.
Vermondâs body tensed. The orb embedded in his chest flickered onceâthen went silent. His clarity of mind allowed him to stay calm, but not unaware. Whatever it was⦠it wanted him to feel small.
He stood, slowly.
He didnât know what it was.
He didnât know when it would come.
But he knew this:
It already knew him.
The wind had long since died, and the only sound Vermond could hear now was the whisper of his own footsteps against the underbrush. The trees, thick and ancient, stretched endlessly around him. Their bark twisted with unnatural patternsâsome like eyes, others like stretched mouths sealed shut.
As he pressed forward, the pull in his chest grew stronger. It wasn't pain, not exactly. It was a knowing. Like something calling out to a piece of him that even he didn't understand yet.
Then, he saw it.
A tall, thin tree standing in the center of a narrow clearingâits bark carved with symbols. Not random scratches. Intentional markings, glowing faintly green, the same color as his own cursed eyes. One of the runes looked like a man⦠no, a figure with an orb embedded in its chest, holding up a crown made of bone.
Vermond stepped closer. As he did, the carvings shimmeredâreacting to him.
He reached out. His fingers brushed the ancient bark.
And the world stopped.
âVermondâ¦â
A whisper crawled into his mindânot loud, but heavy. Not human. It didnât come from his ears but somewhere deeper, buried in his very soul. His breath caught in his throat.
He stepped back, heart pounding, but the forest stayed still. Quiet. Waiting.
Then, among the roots, something caught his eye. A stone altar, half-buried beneath moss. Ancient. Atop it lay a smooth black disc, etched with the same runesâand a symbol that made his blood run cold: the exact structure he was heading toward, depicted in eerie precision, and above it, a crown⦠floating over a throne.
Vermond stared, his chest tightening.
Heâd been here before.
Not in this body, not in this life. But this place⦠this place remembered him.
It had carved his image into stone, into trees. It had been watching.
Waiting.
Behind him, the trees creaked. Not from windâbut from something moving.
Vermond turned slowly.
In the distance, a single pair of glowing emerald eyes flickered to life between the trees⦠watching him⦠unblinking.
He didnât move.
He didnât dare.
The forest had never been silent.
Until now.
Vermond panted heavily, blood dripping from his cracked knuckles, skin scorched from the searing blows exchanged within the ancient, dark chamber. The creature before himâtowering, skeletal, wrapped in sinew that shimmered like obsidianâlet out a low, inhuman growl that echoed through the structure's hollow bones. Its breath was not air, but a cold void that stung at the edges of Vermondâs mind.
This was no ordinary guardian. It was ancientâolder than memory, a thing not born but constructed by intent, possibly bound to protect what lay deeper in this cursed structure.
Vermondâs thoughts twisted with every step the creature took. His eyes still burned with the markâ48, but the clarity he had gained from the first artifact flickered. It wasnât enough. He could feel his limbs aching to obey the chaos inside him rather than his own will.
"Not now⦠hold it together⦠I have to control it," he muttered, teeth gritting as he barely avoided a strike that shattered a section of wall behind him.
He darted under the guardianâs sweeping claw, sliding across the stone and slamming his fist into its ribcage. But it did nothing. It wasnât about brute strength. This thing was testing something elseâhis spirit, his discipline.
âYou are still weakâ¦â the creature rasped, though its mouth didnât move. The voice came from everywhere and nowhere.
Vermond staggered, shadows flickering in his mindâFrederenâs last expression, the screams, the souls he had consumed. The guilt clawed at him.
But thenâ¦
"You did what you had to do."
That voiceâhis grandfather again. Clear, steady. Like a stone breaking through fog. His hand stopped trembling.
Vermond exhaled. His focus returned. His body movedânot with rage, but balance. He pivoted, drawing the power from within without letting it control him, weaving it into his strikes like flowing rivers of intent. His eyes glowed, no longer with hunger⦠but resolve.
He slammed both palms into the creatureâs chest, channeling that inner fire. The guardian convulsed, let out one last roarâthen shattered into motes of black and violet light.
Silence.
Vermond dropped to one knee, breathing heavily, the number in his eyes unchangedâbut something else shifted. The walls around him began to pulse with faint emerald veins, guiding him forward. And then, at the heart of the chamber, something floated⦠waiting.
A second artifact.
Unlike the orb embedded in his chest, this one was jagged, crystalline, hovering above a dark pedestal. As he reached out, the chamber whispered with a thousand voices, but none of them screamed this time.
The moment his fingers brushed it, pain lanced through his spineâbut this was different. It didnât burnâit aligned.
His breathing steadied.
The voices hushed.
His soul⦠quieted.
And the number remained: 48.
But now, he understood it better.
He wasnât just surviving anymore.
He was becoming something terrifying.
Something precise.
The forest was too quiet.
Vermond sat alone, back against a cold, barkless tree. The sky above swirled with pale clouds, the moon hanging like a dead eye staring through the silence. His breath slowed. His heartbeat was steadyâbut it didnât feel like his.
The glowing 48 in his eye pulsed faintly with every beat, like a quiet reminder of all he had done.
All he had consumed.
He clenched his hands, dirt caught in his fingernails, blood long dried on his palms. He was trying to hold it togetherâto hold himself together. But then, the artifact on his side began to humâa sick, low vibration that rippled through his ribs.
Without thinking, he stood.
And then, it happened.
A snapânot from a branch, but from inside him. Like a string had been pulled too tight for too long.
He gasped, dropped to one kneeâhis hands plunged into the cold soil. And the ground responded.
It cracked.
A clawed hand shot up from the earth.
Skin pale, peeling. Eyes sunken. A mouth wide open in an eternal scream.
Vermond fell backward as the corpse dragged itself out of the groundâits neck twisted, one leg dragging behind. It was wearing part of a pirateâs armor. A familiar one.
âYouâ¦â the undead gurgled, voice like cracked metal, âyou⦠promised meâ¦â
Vermondâs eyes widened. âNo. No, I didnât mean toâ!â
Then, his vision flickered.
The number in his eye changed.
48 â 47
His chest seized with cold. Heâd just spent a soul.
He had summoned the dead.
> âOne soul⦠one tetherâ¦â a voice whispered in his mind, ancient and cruel.
âYou are the chain, necromancer.â
The pirate corpse lunged. Vermond dodged to the side, barely keeping his balance.
âIâm not ready,â he whispered, âI canâtâ!â
But something clicked. That clarity from the artifactâit flickered again. A pulse of focus cut through the chaos. His breath calmed. The corpse turned to charge againâ
He raised his hand.
âStop.â
The undead froze.
Twitching. Groaning. Straining against invisible bindings.
And yetâit obeyed.
Vermond rose slowly, sweat trailing down his neck, breath fogging in the cold. His outstretched fingers trembledâbut the pirate stood still, bound to his will.
The whispers returned, softer now. Pleased.
> âClaim your weapon⦠or be devoured by it.â
He stared into the hollow sockets of the thing he summoned⦠and clenched his fist.
The corpse dropped to its knees.
Controlled.
Vermond looked down at his trembling hand, then at the faint number glowing in his eyeâ47.
ââ¦Then Iâll use every one of you,â he said quietly, voice filled with fire, âif it means I survive.â
He turned toward the dark tree line.
Something was watching him.
The whispering wasnât done.
Vermond knelt beside a dying campfire, his back to the ruin. The wind had settled into a dull silence, broken only by the breath of the forest. His hands, still trembling from the last fight, clutched the side of his cloak where the blood had dried black. His eyesâburning blood-emeraldâflicked with the number 47.
One soul used. One undead summoned.
The figure stood beside him now, unmoving. A tall, silent sentinel wrapped in ghostly ash and tattered armor. Its presence wasnât warm or comforting, but it obeyed. And that was what Vermond neededâfor now.
He glanced at it.
That soul once belonged to a pirate. Now it stood bound in silence, borrowed from death to serve a will not its own. As long as it remained summoned, one soul remained tiedâno longer his, no longer free.
The knowledge had settled into him like a weight.
Each summon consumed one soul.
And each active undead required one soul at all times.
He couldnât bring them back unless he had souls to spare. The more he summoned, the faster the count would drop. He knew what would happen if it reached zero, though he didnât want to admit it.
He rose slowly, pain still gnawing at his ribs, and whispered toward the summoned:
"Youâre not just bones. Youâre voices I took. I remember the screamingâ¦"
The undead didnât respond. It waited.
Something shifted in the trees againâeyes watching. Hunger in the dark. A new enemy stirring.
Vermond turned to face the ruin. A cold breath swept through the trees, and the summoned undead stepped forward, shielding its master.
"Then letâs see what one soul can doâ¦" he whispered, voice low and steady.
And together, they moved into the dark.
Then came the sound.
A slow, distorted tearingâlike flesh dragged over rusted metal.
Something emerged from the fog.
It was malformed, taller than Vermond, its skin dark and wet, as though it had been birthed from the void itself. Its head was a mess of torn muscle and bone, no faceâonly an opening maw that screamed without sound.
The undead moved.
It glided forward, silent, its movements smooth but predatory. The creature responded instantly, lunging like a beast unchained.
They collided with brutal forceâno clash of weapons, just a violent distortion of air as mist and darkness exploded on impact.
The undead clawed through the creatureâs shadow-flesh, raking its essence with supernatural rage. The creature retaliated, limbs twisting unnaturally, slamming the undead into the earthâbut it phased through, rebounding with ghostlike speed and pinning the beast against a tree.
There was a high-pitched whine, like the souls of the dead howling all at once.
The undead thrust its hand into the creatureâs chest. A violent pull of energy ripped through the airâthen silence.
The monster collapsed.
Vermond watched in awe. His eyes burned with the soul-countâ47âstill glowing crimson.
The undead turned back toward him⦠and knelt.
Vermond's heart raced. "So this⦠is my power."
The kneeling undead remained still, its ghostly form flickering like a dying ember. Vermond stepped closer, cautious but drawn by instinct. The soul number in his eyesâ47âreminded him of the price. A single summon, a single soul.
He raised his hand slowly. The undead lifted its head in response, awaiting command.
âStand,â Vermond said.
It obeyed.
A strange sensation pulsed through his body, like threads of his consciousness were tethered to the thingâhe could feel it, not just see it. Each movement, each breathless pause. He could will it.
âI wonder⦠how many I can summon,â he murmured.
The air around him chilled. He closed his eyes, focusing, reaching into the void of consumed souls. Faces flickeredâsoldiers, pirates, those he didnât want to rememberâbut he needed them now.
He pulled again.
The wind howled, and the forest trembled as a second undead clawed itself out of the soilâthis one smaller, limber, with sharp, broken armor still clinging to its translucent form. Its eyes glowed tooâfaint, but hungry.
46
They stood before him nowâtwo undead, bound to him.
Suddenly, whispers brushed his ears. Faint, distantâyet familiar.
âThey are watchingâ¦â
Vermond turned.
Far off between the trees, silhouettes stood still.
Not undead. Not human.
Watching.
The forest had become a grave of secrets. And something else now knew what Vermond had done.
The shape moved.
It didnât walk. It glided.
Closer.
One step.
Then another.
Each movement was unnaturalâglitching between space, like reality couldnât contain it. Cloaked in black and green hues, with long, flowing limbs that bent the wrong way, its face was shrouded beneath a hood of writhing shadows.
And then, it spoke.
âYou should not have summoned them, Child of the Void.â
Vermondâs fists clenched. âWho are you?â
The figure stopped a few meters away. His undead growled low, weapons drawnâbut the figure raised one finger, and both dropped to their knees. Not from fear. From command.
Vermond took a step back.
âYouâve tapped into what you do not yet understand,â the watcher said, voice layered like multiple tones speaking at once. âThe souls you consumeâevery one of them binds you closer to us.â
Vermondâs eyes widened. âUs?â
âYou are not the first, and you will not be the last. But unlike the others, your thread has not been cut yet. Why?â
Silence.
The creature drifted forward, now face to face with him. From beneath the hood, Vermond sawâno eyes, no mouth, only a swirling pool of green flame.
âI wonder⦠if you can survive whatâs coming.â
Without warning, it raised its arm, and something pulsed outâa wave of pure, eldritch energy that threw Vermond back. The ground cracked, trees snapped. The undead howled and lunged toward the creature.
And thenâ
The battle began.
Vermondâs breath caught. This was the thing that had been watching him.
One of his undead, the first he had summoned, stepped forward to intercept it, reacting as if on instinct. The Watcher didnât move. It simply stared, and the air around it seemed to twist and spiral, like time itself resisting its existence.
The undead lunged. In a blur, it struck with a sweeping blow.
The Watcher didnât dodge. It raised a long, clawed hand, and caught the attack mid-air. The force trembled the ground, scattering dead leaves around them. With a sudden twist, the Watcher hurled the undead backward, slamming it into a tree.
The second undead lunged from the sideâthis one faster, more agileâbut the Watcher reacted with a wave of its hand. Shadowy tendrils erupted from beneath its robes, grabbing and binding the undead mid-motion, holding it aloft. The air vibrated with a horrible, guttural sound that resembled laughter.
Vermond watched, not in fearâbut focus. He was learning. Observing how his creations handled real battle.
The first undead pulled itself from the tree, its bones cracked but limbs intact. It rejoined the fight without hesitation, flanking the Watcher again.
Vermond clenched his fist. His eyes glowed faintly, the number "46" still shimmering. He could feel it. The souls inside him twisted in unrest as he focused, preparing to issue a command.
But then the Watcher spoke. Its voice echoed with ancient distortion.
"You are not ready, necromancer... yet still, you dare call the dead."
Vermond stepped forward. "Who are you?"
The Watcher tilted its head, shadows flickering behind it.
"I am what remains. I am what watches. You feed on death... but do you understand it?"
Before Vermond could answer, the Watcher released the second undead, letting it fall to the ground. It didnât attack againâit simply faded backward, slowly retreating into the dark mist of the forest.
The two undead returned to Vermondâs side, slightly damaged but standing strong.
And in Vermondâs heart, a darker curiosity bloomed. What are the Watcher doing here? Why did it test him and let him live?
One thing was certain: the forest had many eyes.
And some of them were waiting for him to fall.
Then something unexpected happened, breaking the silence of the forest.
A deep mechanical hum vibrated through the air.
From above, the clouds parted as a Federation fighter jet cut through the sky, small and sleek, trailing smoke from one wing. Vermondâs eyes narrowed. The number in his eyes flickeredâ46. His heart thudded with an unfamiliar rhythm.
The fighter jet spun and jerked, failing to stabilize. Its emergency thrusters fired at the last second as it descended in a violent spiral, crashing into the forest clearing just a few hundred meters away in a flash of sparks and twisted metal. The undead twitched in response, snapping their heads toward the sound.
Vermond clenched his fists.
ââ¦Not now,â he whispered.
But the forest heard. And so did the Watcher.
Without a word, the creature began to recede into the shadows, melting into the trees like smoke. Vermond turned back toward the direction of the crash. He didnât know why a Federation ship had landed hereâor why it was aloneâbut something told him it wasnât a coincidence.
He and his undead moved through the undergrowth like phantoms.
The smell of burning circuitry and cracked fuel tanks filled the clearing as Vermond arrived. The fighter was in pieces, but the cockpit had survived. From inside, someone coughed.
A lone pilot, in a Federation suit, forced the hatch open and tumbled out, dragging a leg clearly broken. He looked upâand froze.
ââ¦Youâ¦â
His voice shook. Vermond stood there, not saying a word, the undead at his side like shadows of death.
The pilotâs breathing quickened.
âYou⦠You were on the Corvette,â the pilot stammered. âYouâre the one they saidâ Youâre the one whoââ
Vermond raised a hand. âLeave,â he said coldly.
But before anything else could be said, one of the undead took a step forward, its eyes glowing like burning coals.
âStay back,â Vermond commanded it, and to his relief, it obeyed.
The pilot, sweating, limped back against the wreckage. âWhat are you? What have they done to you?â
âIâm surviving,â Vermond said. âThatâs all Iâm doing.â
The number in his eyesâ46âstill glowed, a silent reminder of the souls he carried.
But from the shadows of the trees⦠something else was watching.
The Watcher wasnât gone.
It was only waiting.
The wreckage hissed behind them, heat still radiating from the torn metal. Vermond stood still, shadows from the trees casting broken lines across his face, the undead looming behind him like ancient guardians.
The Federation pilot sat slumped against a blackened piece of hull, clutching his side. His visor was cracked, and blood stained his suit. Vermond finally spoke, his voice quiet, but cold like the breeze threading through the woods.
ââ¦What happened to the others?â
The pilot looked up at him, eyes wide with confusion and fear. He hesitated before speaking.
âThe Fallen Battleshipâ¦â he began, âIt turned on us. No warning. No orders. Carlos de Fallen⦠heâhe went mad. Vice-Captain Yurell tried to take command, tried to call for retreat, but⦠the bridge was hit. Yurell is⦠dead.â
Vermond didnât move. His expression didnât change. But the number in his eyesâ46âflickered faintly.
âAll three Federation ships are gone,â the pilot went on, bitterness and horror flooding his voice. âWiped out like nothing. All because we followed a damn nobleâs orders!â
Vermondâs gaze dropped to the dirt. The soil was dark hereâdarker than the rest. Almost like dried blood.
Then the pilot lifted his head, and his tone shifted.
âBut what happened⦠inside the Corvette?â he asked. âWhat really happened in there?â
Vermond didnât answer immediately. He didnât even look at him. The memory flashed in fragmentsâbodies, screams, Kianaâs face twisted by shadows, the orb, the voices.
ââ¦I lost control,â Vermond finally said.
The pilot blinked. âControl? Of what?â
Vermond looked him in the eyes, and for the first time, the pilot saw the truthâthe haunting glow of 46, the echo of death stitched into his soul.
âMyself,â Vermond said. âEverything I am.â
A long silence stretched between them.
Then, from the trees, a low rumble echoed. The pilot scrambled to stand, but Vermond didnât flinch.
He could feel it again.
The Watcher was near.
And it was no longer watching.
It was approaching.
The Watcher returned.
It stepped from the shadows like smoke manifesting into flesh. Its body flickered between shapesâhalf-robed phantom, half-charred skeleton, its face an empty void where light seemed to die.
The Federation pilot froze. âW-What is that?!â
The Watcher turned its head, slowly⦠then suddenly darted forward, spectral hand reaching for the pilotâs neck.
âNo!â Vermond snapped.
A crack split the ground as his undead lurched into motion, intercepting the Watcher with a ghostly roar. The Watcher barely flinchedâit swiped through one undead, sending it staggering, then raised a clawed hand toward the pilot again.
âYou protect this?â the Watcher hissed. âHow many have you slaughtered, necromancer?â
Its voice echoed with unnatural layersâancient, furious, mocking.
âYou killed them.â
The pilotâs eyes widened, shaken. âWh-What is it talking aboutâ¦?â
âIââ Vermondâs hands trembled. âI didnât mean to⦠I lost controlâ¦â
The Watcher grinned, if it could be called that.
âYou enjoyed it.â
That was when something cracked inside Vermond.
The number in his eyesâ46âflickered rapidly. His breathing deepened. His teeth clenched.
Then the air split.
A wild surge of energy erupted around him. Black and green lightning surged across his arms and shoulders. His eyes burnedâbright like twin emeralds set in obsidian fire. The number solidified again. Still 46âbut pulsing with violent clarity.
The undead around him changed.
Their forms sharpenedâmore solid, more defined. Their aura twisted with the same black-green energy, crackling through their limbs. One let out a haunting shriek, its power intensifying as if Vermondâs fury had poured directly into its soul.
The Watcher tilted its head, intrigued. âAh⦠Now I seeâ¦â
Vermond stepped forward, face shadowed by his own power.
âIf you ever try to touch him again,â he said in a low voice, âIâll show you what it really means to control the dead.â
The forest pulsed with silence.
The Watcher paused⦠then laughed, a low, distorted sound like a funeral bell echoing backwards.
âVery well, Necromancer. Show me.â
Then it faded into mist, like smoke burned away by wind.
Vermond stood there, chest heaving, fists clenched. The pilot sat stunned, staring at him like he was no longer human.
And maybe he wasnât.
The silence between them stretched like a wound.
The pilot, helmet tucked under his arm, kept his gaze locked on the flickering green numbers in Vermondâs eyesâ46. He seemed to study them, the undead, and Vermond himself as if trying to piece together the impossible.
âYouâ¦â he finally muttered, voice hoarse. âYou were the one in the Corvette, right? That thing earlier said⦠you fought everyone. Killed them. You're the one who⦠nearly destroyed the noble Carlos de Fallenâ¦?â
Vermondâs eyes narrowed, his voice calm but ice-cold.
âSo Carlos is still alive⦠and he killed everyone, right?â
The pilot hesitated. âYes. He returned alone⦠said the Corvette exploded with you inside. But there were survivors. Not many. The ones who did liveâ¦â He looked away for a moment. âThey didnât die peacefully.â
The undead behind Vermond shifted, their presence causing the shadows nearby to shiver unnaturally.
The pilot stared at them again, cautious. âYou did this? Raised them?â
Vermond didnât answer directly. He stepped closer to the downed fighter, placing a hand on its blackened hull. Its surface was scorched, one wing half-buried in the soft soil, the engine dripping coolant onto charred moss.
âCan it still fly?â he asked.
The pilot ran his hand through his messy hair. âEngineâs overheated. Stabilizers are offline. Hydraulics... shot. But with time, and parts⦠maybe.â
Vermond turned his back. âWe donât have time.â
The pilot glanced nervously at the forest behind them, haunted by what heâd just witnessed. âThen what do we do?â
Vermond crouched near one of his undeadâplacing a hand on its back. The undead seemed to tremble slightly under his touch, as if acknowledging him.
âWe fix what we can. Scavenge what we need. And then⦠we go back.â
âBackâ¦?â the pilot echoed, confused.
âTo the stars.â
The wind picked up.
And for a moment, in the trees above, something moved. Watching.
Always watching.
Sparks crackled from the broken panel as Vermond slid the last component into place. The pilot was sweating, sleeves rolled up, hands blackened with soot and oil. The engine core hummed low, not steadyâbut alive.
âSheâll fly,â the pilot said, wiping his forehead. âBarely.â
Vermond nodded silently, then turned toward his undead. Two figures stood at attention, eyes hollow and burning faintly green. He opened the cargo hold of the small fighterâtight, but just enough space for them.
âTheyâll ride inside,â Vermond muttered.
The pilot blinked. âYouâre bringing them?â
âTheyâre mine now,â Vermond said, stepping into the co-pilot seat. âAnd Iâm not going back alone.â
Vermondâs fingers curled tightly around the edge of his seat as the fighter jet shook mid-air.
Then it came againâ¦
That sound.
A low, resonant pulseânot from this world. Not metal. Not natural. Not human.
He felt it in his spine, in his teeth, in the pit of his chest.
The pilotâs hands danced across the controls. âWeâve got something on the scanners. Itâsââ
The sky above cracked open like a wound, and from the clouds emerged a sleek, silent shape. Dark. Winged. Gliding. No engine trails. No signal. No IFF. No markings.
Vermond stood up slowly, staring through the cockpit glass. âItâs not Federation.â
The pilotâs voice dropped. âThen what is it?â
And Vermond, for the first time in a while, whispered truthfullyâ
âI donât know.â
The Cleanser descended like a predator, its hull shiftingâpulsatingâlike it was alive. Energy gathered around its undercarriage, swirling with black mist and red lightning.
Inside the cargo hold, the undead hissed in unison.
âWhatever that thing is,â Vermond muttered, his voice steady, âit wants me gone.â
The fighter swerved, narrowly dodging a bolt of crimson light that tore a hole through the clouds.
âIt followed me from space⦠itâs not done.â
The number in his eyesâ46âflashed again. His skin tingled with static. The air around him grew cold.
He reached back toward the cargo hold, gripping the latch.
âIf this thing wants a fightâ¦â
His voice darkened.
ââ¦then Iâll give it one.â
âIâve rerouted power through the secondary cores,â the pilot muttered, âbut the cooling system is still down. If we fly like thisââ
âWeâll make it,â Vermond said.
His voice was low, hollow. Determined.
Then something shifted. A strange hum passed through the jet's frame. The pilot looked up. âWhat the hell...?â
Green and black sparks licked along the wings. The metal pulsedâno, breathed. The shipâs systems surged, lights flickering on with unnatural life. The engine no longer whined in resistanceâit growled, like something awakened.
Vermond's hand was still resting on the hull.
The pilot took a step back, his jaw tightening. âDid you⦠do that?â
âI donât know,â Vermond replied honestly, his brow furrowing. âBut I felt something. Like a fire inside me. Like I needed this ship to move.â
They boarded. The undead slithered into the cargo hold, silent guardians. The cockpit dimmed, yet pulsed with new energy. Controls felt differentâalmost alive. They took off, the world beneath trembling as the jetânow tinged in deathâs breathâscreamed into the sky.
And then the shadow came.
From orbit, a black ship descendedâjagged, insectoid, cloaked in black mist. The Cleanser.
The pilotâs eyes widened in horror. âNo⦠no, not them againââ
It launched a barrage. Purple beams and crackling shots tore through the sky.
Vermondâs hand gripped the throttle. âHold on.â
As if hearing his resolve, the jet respondedânot with speed alone, but agility beyond its specs. It danced through the beams like a ghost, engines blazing with the green-black surge.
Inside the cargo hold, the undead began to howlânot in fear, but anticipation.
âIâm not going to die,â Vermond whispered. âNot here. Not now.â
The sky became a battlefield once more.
The sky howled.
Searing energy bolts lit the atmosphere like a thousand dying stars, each one barely missing the fighter jet as it twisted and spun between them. Vermond gritted his teeth, hands gripping the controls. The flight stick felt different nowâless like metal and more like an extension of himself.
âHang on!â the pilot yelled. âThis ship wasnât built for this!â
âNoâ¦â Vermondâs voice was cold. âBut it is now.â
With every pulse of emotion, black-green lightning surged through the shipâs frame, enhancing its thrusters, tightening its turns, sharpening its sensors. It moved not like a machineâbut like a predator.
Behind them, the Cleanser pursued. A twisted vessel that looked more like a floating executioner than a ship, its body pulsating with hungry void-light. Massive scythe-like appendages unfurled from its flanks, and beneath them, dark energy cannons gathered power.
Thenâ
BOOM!
A blast grazed their wing. Warning lights screamed.
In the back, one of Vermondâs undead braced itself against the wall, flickering violently. The pilot cursed. âWe wonât survive another direct hit!â
âIâm not letting them take anything else from me,â Vermond muttered, eyes burning. âI refuse.â
And thenâhe felt it.
Like a whisper beneath his skin. His hand sparked again, lightning crawling into the dashboard. The shipâs systems bent to his willâarmor plating hardened, the engines surged, and the weapons system flickered to life.
âAre those... weapons?â the pilot gawked as new barrels extended from the sides of the jet. âThis thing didnât have guns!â
âNow it does.â Vermondâs voice was full of fury.
He locked onto the Cleanser, eyes narrowing. âLetâs see how you like this.â
He pressed the trigger.
Green-black beams erupted from the modified guns, tearing across the sky. The undead in the hold let out a piercing screech in unison, their presence channeling through the ship, amplifying its wrath.
One beam caught the Cleanserâs side. It recoiled, its hull distorting, shrieking.
âDid we get it?!â the pilot shouted.
âNo,â Vermond said, âbut we wounded it.â
The Cleanser shrieked in returnâsomehow not with metal, but with voice, deep and bone-chilling. Its form shifted, and suddenly dozens of smaller spectral drones launched from its belly.
âNew targetsââ the pilot began.
âIâll deal with them.â
Vermondâs eyes flickeredâ46âand then he whispered a name that had never been spoken aloud.
A third undead emerged beside the others in the hold, shaped like a knight of old, cloaked in smoke and flame, its eyes glowing like lanterns of the abyss.
His soul count dropped to 45.
âAttack.â
The hatch opened. The three undead leapt from the jet, catching wind, flying like cursed harbingers toward the Cleanserâs drones in mid-air.
The battle in the sky had only just begun.
The sky bled green fire.
Vermondâs undead clashed mid-air with the Cleanserâs spectral drones, the atmosphere torn apart by shrieks and eruptions of corrupted energy. His summoned warriors fought savagelyâone slicing through drones like smoke, another shielding the jet from behind, the last diving with a scythe of bone and fireâbut they were being overwhelmed.
âTheyâre not holding,â the pilot muttered. âThereâs too many!â
âI know!â Vermondâs voice cracked, a surge of pain in his chest. Every movement felt heavierâsummoning that third undead had shaken something loose inside him. Not just power⦠but something darker.
His soul count burned behind his eyes. 45.
âThen we run, right?!â the pilot shouted.
âNo.â Vermondâs voice turned sharp. âWe fight.â
As he reached deep into his fury again, the Cleanser doveâits scythe-like limbs spread open like wings, a beam of pure annihilation charging between them. It was preparing a final strike.
And in that moment, he heard it again.
The whisper.
The Watcherâs voice.
> âYou still donât understand. This is what you are. This is what you were meant to become. You feed on the dead, and now you command them. You will never go back to being human, Vermond.â
Vermond trembled. âShut up!â
The ship surged, responding not to logic but to emotion. The enhancements flared once moreâbut they were unstable now. Lights blinked wildly, the engine pulsed like a heartbeat, the ship itself trembling as if caught between two worlds.
Another drone smashed into their wing. Sparks. Smoke. The fighter began to spiral.
âStabilizerâs failing!â
âIâll hold itâ!â Vermondâs body screamed in pain, but he forced the energy againâgreen lightning crackling from his arms, wrapping around the console, trying to control the fall.
His nose bled. His vision blurred.
He saw flashes againâmemories not his own. A throne. A sea of corpses. A broken moon. His eyes flickeredâsomething was inside him. Something more ancient than the undead.
âBrace for impact!â the pilot screamed.
And thenâ
CRASH.
The jet hit the ground hard, sliding across the rocky terrain, metal grinding, fire erupting in its trail. One undead was shredded mid-air, vanishing in a screech of torn soulfire.
Silence.
Smoke.
Pain.
Then the Cleanser hovered into view above the wreckage, its shadow casting a long darkness across the crash site. Its arms opened wide, energy swirling for one final judgment.
Vermond crawled from the wreck, blood dripping down his brow. The pilot was unconscious. He looked upâ
And smiled.
Because the last two undead were still standing.
And behind them⦠the earth itself began to shake.
Something was rising.
Something more.
The ground trembled again beneath Vermondâs feet. Cracks split the soil where the artifact had first pulsed in his hand. His undeadsâboth silent, ghostly figuresâstood still, eyes glowing dimly. The pilot was still unconscious inside the fighter jet, unaware of what was rising below.
A deep, grinding sound echoed across the valley. Not like thunder. Not like engines.
It was older. Heavier.
It was the sound of metal screaming from forgotten centuries.
And thenâeruption.
Soil burst into the air, sending a shockwave through the forest. Trees bent, torn from their roots as an enormous black mass ascended slowly from beneath. Not alive⦠not dead. But something in between.
A destroyer-class ship, half-decayed, half-forged in necrotic bone and rusted metal, rose from the grave. Its hull was marked in old, dead languagesâfaint runes now glowing with emerald fire. No mouth. No sound. Just the quiet hum of power awakening.
Vermond staggered back. âWhat⦠is this?â
Then the artifact in his hand pulsed once. And the number in his eyes flickeredâ
[46]
The ship responded.
Its enginesâsilent and blackâdidnât burn fuel, but something darker. Souls? Memories? He didnât know. But somehow⦠it obeyed.
It floated above the earth like a phantom, drifting toward the fighter jetâprotectively. The wind around Vermond had vanished, as if reality itself held its breath.
And thenâ
A shriek from the sky.
A light. No, a shadow.
The Cleanser had returned.
Descending fast. It had followed them.
Vermondâs body surged with instinct. Electricity coiled across his armsâblack and green energy dancing around his fingertips. âNot this time.â
The undead destroyer turned slowly, angling itself toward the incoming threat. No cannons were visible. No weapons. Yet Vermond felt the power building inside it.
The cleansing ship opened fire. Vermond grabbed the artifact again, and something strange happenedâ
His mind split.
For a moment, he saw the world as the undead did. Cold. Measured. Strategic.
He raised his hand, and the destroyer responded.
It fired.
Not missiles. Not lasers.
But a pulse of soul-disruption energy, like a scream from the abyss, slamming into the cleanserâs shields and cracking them open.
The pilot stirred inside the jet, coughing.
âWh⦠what the hellâs happening?â
Vermond stood firm, eyes glowing, his voice low:
âThe past is buried here. But I just unearthed it.â
The pilot stumbled out of the fighter jet, shielding his eyes as the undead destroyer hovered above like a beast torn from forgotten war legends. It didnât flyâit loomed, as though gravity itself feared it.
Vermond stood in front of the rising dust, cloak torn and scorched, green and black arcs of necrotic energy dancing around him like an aura of vengeance.
The pilot stared, trembling. âYou⦠what are you?â
Vermondâs glowing eyes turned toward himâ[46] still flickering within them.
âIâm just trying to survive.â
Another beam came down from the Cleanser above, slicing into the earth. The explosion knocked the pilot back, nearly killing him again. The ship was firing recklessly now, desperate to end what it didnât understand.
Vermond raised both arms. His undeads stepped forwardâsilent, awaiting his will.
âI need cover,â he muttered.
His voice echoed. His mind reached out.
And suddenly, the undead destroyerâs wings spread openâmassive bone-like flaps unfolding from the hull, glowing veins of soul-energy pulsing through them. From its underbelly, several rusted pods detached and dropped to the ground, slamming with thunderous impact.
More undead.
A squad of phantom-like soldiers rose from the pods, weapons fused into their skeletal arms, armor etched in runes from ancient battles. They formed a circle around Vermond and the pilot.
The pilotâs voice cracked. âYou can summon entire armies now?!â
âI didnât know I could,â Vermond said, eyes narrowed. âBut I guess Iâm learning.â
The Cleanser, realizing the threat, began its descentâits hull splitting open, revealing tendrils of purified plasma and containment fields.
It would purge the surface.
Vermond's eyes burned brighter. The artifact pulsed again in his palm, and his voice dropped, cold:
âTry me.â
The undead destroyer shifted, rotating its entire mass to aim directly at the Cleanser. Then, with a deep, echoing humâit launched everything.
A spiraling vortex of cursed energy tore from its center, laced with fragments of the souls Vermond had consumed. The attack ripped through the sky, colliding with the Cleanser mid-air.
Explosion.
A blast of black and green light swallowed the clouds, and the Cleanser was thrown back, spiraling like a falling angel. Vermondâs undead soldiers raised their weapons and fired, overwhelming the sky with ghostly gunfire.
The pilot collapsed, completely stunned. âYouâre not a salvagerâ¦â
Vermond turned to him, calm now, but his aura still thrumming. âI was. I still want to be. But if this is what I have to become to surviveâ¦â
He looked to the burning sky.
ââ¦Then Iâll become it.â
The fire raged behind them, consuming shattered steel and torn earth. The air trembled with the force of it, and even the undead destroyer creaked like it mourned. Ash floated through the night like dying stars.
Vermond stood, his cloak scorched and his breathing shallow. One undead still flanked him, the other torn apart in the earlier fight. The pilot, still unconscious and crumpled near the smoldering jet, was lucky to be alive.
And thenâ¦
From the heart of the fire, something moved.
At first, it was just a shadowâlong and twisting through the smoke. But soon, footsteps echoed. Not mechanical, not heavy, but graceful. Measured. Like a predator that didnât need to rush.
The flames parted.
A figure emerged. Cloaked in obsidian armor, cracked and smoldering, as though it had crawled through the sun itself. Its face was hidden beneath a helmet molded with ancient runes, and in its hand, it held a long bladeâone that seemed to drip with void, the space around it distorting.
Vermond narrowed his glowing eyes. âCleanser?â
But noâthis was different. Worse.
The undead beside him growled lowly, a sound Vermond hadnât heard before. Not fear⦠something else. Recognition?
The figure stopped, standing tall between the blazing wreckage. It raised its hand, palm open⦠and spoke, voice like shattering glass.
âYou do not deserve them.â
Vermond took a step forward, fists clenched. âWho are you?â
It ignored the question, its gaze locked on the undead destroyer behind Vermond. âThe key has been used. The lock undone. And now... the vessel walks. But you, child⦠you are not ready to command it.â
Vermondâs veins lit with green lightning.
âTry me.â
The figure moved like smoke and thunder. Faster than the eye. Blade raised.
The last undead leapt, intercepting the strikeâand the shockwave split the ground beneath them.
The blade sliced through the air with a shriekâand in an instant, the last of Vermondâs undead fell, its spectral form vanishing in a crack of light and smoke. Ash scattered where it once stood. The black-armored figure stood still, unfazed, its void blade dripping nothing and everything.
Vermond gritted his teeth. His fists trembledânot with fear, but with rage. His eyes glowed brighter, the number "46" pulsing like a warning. Too slow. Too weak. Too reckless.
Behind him, the undead destroyer groanedâits towering presence pulsing with dormant power, its runes flickering like dying stars. Its hull cracked open again, ready to obey.
Vermond turned toward it and raised his hand.
"Fireâ" he commandedâ
But then, he stopped. His eyes widened.
The cannonâs targeting rune locked on everythingâincluding him.
If the destroyer fired now, he would be vaporized too.
His breathing became shallow. Not like this.
Then, almost instinctively, he raised both hands instead. His body felt heavy, the green and black energy swirling with more focus now. Focus⦠like the artifact taught⦠control.
The air shifted.
The pods beneath the destroyer hissed, sliding open with a metallic groan. From the shadows of the massive vessel, figures dropped one by oneâlimbs cracking into place, hollow eyes lighting up with pale green fire.
Undead soldiers. Dozens.
They stood at attention around Vermond. Burned armor. Broken weapons. No words.
Vermond stepped back, stunned. His eyes narrowed at his handâhe didnât lose a soul. The number "46" remained.
Not mine⦠these werenât summoned. These were waiting. Sleeping.
Then he felt it.
A sudden pressure on the back of his neck.
A presence.
He turned his head slowly.
Far up on a crag of blackened rock, partially hidden by shadows and smokeâ
the Watcher stood.
Unmoving. Unblinking.
Watching.
And smiling.
The battlefield burned, fire licking the edges of the crater where the fighter had landed. Ash and smoke coiled like specters in the windless air.
The void-armored assassin stood still, cloaked in shifting shadows. Opposite it, ten of Vermondâs undead soldiers had formed a lineâsome with rusted swords, others with salvaged rifles buzzing with necrotic energy. Their eye sockets glowed with faint green embers, a reflection of the power tethering them to Vermond.
Without warning, the assassin launched forward.
It moved like a specter, almost teleporting. A rifle-bearing undead squeezed the triggerâtoo slow. The assassin spun mid-air, avoiding the bullet and slicing through the soldierâs chest.
One down.
A second undead raised a shield and tried to cover the third, but the void blade cleaved through bothâTwo, three.
Vermondâs heart pounded, watching from behind, standing near the downed pilot. His hands were trembling. The artifactâs pulse inside his chest brought a painful clarity, but not the control he needed.
He couldnât just stand here.
The remaining undead tried to coordinate. One with a rifle managed to graze the assassinâs sideâa burst of black, oily blood splashed from the wound. Another followed up with a blade, cutting shallow into its shoulder. But the void creature snarled and retaliated with a whirlwind spin, bisecting another two.
Four, five.
The sixth raised a bayonet-rifle and fired at close range, exploding part of the assassinâs armâonly to be gutted by a hidden dagger seconds later.
Six.
Vermondâs eyes burned. The number 46 still glowed inside them.
I can't waste them⦠but if I donât fight too, theyâll all fall.
He stepped forward.
Green-black electricity surged around him, veins lighting up as he summoned the souls within himâraw, burning, barely tamed. His remaining undead fanned out, holding the assassin at bay.
He focused, summoning the essence of one soulânot to raise another soldier, but to enhance his own body.
His legs moved faster. His arms were stronger.
His senses sharpened.
He charged.
The assassin turned just as Vermond arrived, launching a kick that the boy ducked under. He swept a glowing hand upward, slamming into the assassinâs ribs. Black sparks exploded.
It roared.
Vermond followed through, dodging a swipe and slamming his fist into its helm. The metal cracked.
He stumbled back, panting. One soul burned. His count dropped to 45.
The undead destroyer behind him rumbled, its eyes glowing dimly. The battlefield pulsed.
And stillâ¦
The void assassin rose.
The fight wasnât over.
The clash of blade and gunfire echoed through the scorched trees as Vermondâs undead dropped like fliesâcut down by the relentless creatureâs speed and raw fury. From ten, only six remained, and the numbers were falling fast.
Vermond gritted his teeth, stepping forward. Green and black electricity crackled across his skin as he consumed another soul, his body pulsing with chaotic energy. His hand burst into spectral flame as he leapt into the fray beside his undead, blade drawn from the ethereal dark. His strike landed heavyâforcing the creature back.
But even then, it wasnât enough.
And then⦠something clicked.
The destroyer behind him groanedâa sound like bones bending through time. Vermond felt it again, that strange whisper within his mind. Noâmore like an instinct. A pull. He raised his arm without thinking, fingers curled toward the sky.
The air rumbled. A hatch opened.
From the destroyer's underbelly, metallic pods hissed and dropped. With sickening thuds, they landed across the charred fieldâand opened.
Undead soldiers poured from the darkness, eyes glowing with eerie green fire, rifles in hand, blades drawn.
Vermond blinked, stunned.
âI didnât⦠know I could do moreâ¦â
He didnât finish. His breath caught in his throat.
Because something⦠watched.
From the forestâs edge, amid the smoke and ruin, stood the Watcher. Not attacking. Not moving. Just smilingâits twisted expression stretching across its pale, eyeless face.
Vermond shivered. He didnât know if it was pride, mockery, or something else.
But one thing was certain.
It wanted him to realize. It wanted him to grow.
And Vermond⦠had just taken another step deeper into the abyss.
The ground trembled as another pod slammed into the scorched soil, followed by another, and another still. The battlefield burned under the fading twilight, but the fire was nothing compared to what Vermond had unleashed.
The enemyâa blur of violence and shadow, panting amid a pile of broken undeadâspun, slicing down another of Vermondâs soldiers with ease. It growled, a distorted voice laced with contempt.
âYou weak bastard!â it spat. âSpamming your armies in no time! Fight like a man!â
Vermond stood amidst the swirling smoke, tattered coat fluttering in the rising heat. His eyes glowed like emerald stars, the number 45 flickering for a heartbeat before vanishing entirely under the glow. Green-black electricity curled around his limbs like serpents, hissing with rage and focus.
He raised his hand.
Again.
More pods opened with hollow hisses, dropping from the undead destroyer like seeds of dread. The earth quaked as one by one, they cracked open.
More undead emerged.
Ten... twenty... fifty... a hundred...
The creature faltered, its confidence shaken as more and more figures joined the fieldâmarching forward in silence, weapons drawn, eyes blazing with soul-fire.
âWeak?â Vermond said coldly, voice deeper now, calm yet thunderous. âFight like a man?â
He took a step forward, blood running from his side, face paleâbut his will unbroken.
âIs there a rulebook in war? A fairness clause in the void?â His gaze narrowed. âNo. Thereâs just survival. And all I want is to go back⦠salvage, fix ships, and never see this cursed place again.â
The enemy snarled and charged.
Vermond didnât flinch.
He stepped back.
The undead surged forward.
Behind him, the Federation pilot stood frozen in awe. His mouth hung open.
"Is that... one hundred and seventy... six?!" he whispered, voice barely audible over the marching.
The field became a sea of bone and steel, rotting flesh and glowing eyes. The creature, for the first time, looked cornered.
And somewhereâfar, far beyond the battlefieldâthe Watcher leaned forward in the dark, grinning wider than before.
The creature roared, wild and desperate, spinning its blade through the air and cleaving three undead in a single arc. It moved like death incarnate, elegant and unrelenting. But for every one it felledâfive more replaced them.
Gunfire cracked from the ranks. Undead rifles barked with a chilling rhythm. Blades clanged. The enemy stumbled.
And thenâit happened.
One of Vermondâs undead lunged, sword plunging through the creatureâs arm.
Another grabbed its leg, dragging it down.
Then came the storm.
Swords slashed.
Rifles fired point-blank into its face, chest, limbs.
The creature screamedâbut it wasnât a scream of death. It was a scream of torment, of being ripped apart inch by inch, its body being fed to the legion Vermond had brought to life.
Limbs were severed, reattached, then torn again.
It tried to crawl, but skeletal fingers crushed its ribs.
It pleaded, but dead eyes do not understand mercy.
They carved through its body slowlyâmethodicallyâlike surgeons of pain. Flesh was shredded. Bone splintered. Undead fists crushed its skull, over and over.
Vermond watched.
And he laughed.
He laughed like something unhinged, something broken. It echoed across the fieldâa sound not of joy, but a madness rising from the pit of his soul. He laughed, and the pilot behind him stumbled back in terror.
The undead were celebrating with violence.
But thenâ
Silence.
Vermond stood frozen.
His smile dropped.
His breath caught.
He stared at the mutilated remains of the creature being devoured by his own creations. And suddenly, his eyes dimmed. The crackle of power around him faded.
His voice came soft, hollow.
ââ¦What was I thinkingâ¦?â
His arms lowered.
The wind howled over the bloody field.
And from the far shadows of the jungle, barely visibleâthe Watcher stood. Smiling.
Eyes wide, black, and gleaming with delight.
He tilted his head, watching Vermond as if he were a painting finally completed. The amusement in his expression said more than a thousand words:
This is the beginning.
The battlefield was silent nowâsilent, except for the moans of the last enemy being slowly torn apart. Sliced, shot, shredded by sword and bullet. The undead did not kill quickly. They surrounded their prey, dragging him down piece by piece, their hollow sockets never blinking, never looking away.
Vermond stood still, hands twitching from the weight of the moment. The pilot remained frozen behind debris, pale and shaken. It was over. For now.
Then the laughter came. Soft at first. A giggle. A chuckle. Then a full, manic burst from Vermond himself. He couldn't stop it.
The pilot shivered.
And then, as quickly as it started, the laughter died.
"Not againâ¦" Vermond muttered, blinking, coming back to his senses.
But around him, the undead still stood. Still breathing. Still moving.
He looked toward the looming undead destroyer in the distance, its shadow cast like a blade across the cracked ground.
How do I call them back�
He tried commands. Words. Orders.
"Stop."
Nothing.
"Return. Disappear. Go back."
Nothing.
Panic edged his voice, but thenâa pulse. A flicker in his eyes. The number glowed faintly. A strange clarity settled in his mind.
He stopped speaking. He focused. He pictured the undead returning to the pods. Marching into the hull. Fading away.
One moved. Then another. Ten. Twenty. Dozens.
The pods on the destroyer hissed open. Black metal stretched out like tongues, and one by one, the undead returned to their place. Some climbed. Some walked straight into the dark. And then they were gone.
Vermond stared, breathing hard.
"I didnât say anythingâ¦"
The pilot whispered behind him, voice dry as ash:
"What⦠are you?"
And far above, barely seenâhidden in the folds of smokeâthe Watcher watched.
Its grin widened.
The moment Vermond stepped inside the undead destroyer, the temperature dropped. The air felt thinânot due to lack of oxygen, but as if the walls themselves were sucking in all warmth and light. The corridors were ribbed with bone-like structures, pulsating with a dim green glow. Ethereal energy slithered through the walls like veins, whispering in forgotten languages. The floor wasn't metalâit was some form of hardened obsidian-like material, scuffed with claw marks and ancient bloodstains.
Behind him, the pilot followed reluctantly, his body stiff and his steps hesitant. He had removed his helmet, revealing wide, terrified eyes that darted around the corridor. âW-What is this place...?â he muttered. âThis isnât a ship... itâs a tomb.â
Vermond didnât answer at first. He was too focused. Too drawn in.
Each step deeper into the destroyer revealed more of its terrifying marvels. The central chamber opened into a throne-like control nodeâan altar surrounded by jagged, floating runes. Tendrils of ghostly energy slithered from the ceiling down into the console. It responded to Vermondâs presence.
He approached slowly. As he placed a hand on the blackened command altar, it pulsed, and a swarm of green holograms blinked to life in an ancient, unknown language. Yet somehow, his mind understood them. The artifact was helping him interpret everything.
The pilot gasped behind him. âYouâre really controlling it... arenât you?â
Vermond simply nodded, though a flicker of doubt crept into his heart. He was steering something far beyond human creation.
Undead crew roamed silently along the halls, ignoring the pilot but bowing slightly when passing Vermond. One even guided them to a chamberâsomewhere between a bridge and a crypt. A wide observation panel revealed the smoldering planet surface behind them.
"Destination, pilot?" Vermond asked.
The pilot jumped at his voice. âW-What?â
âYou said the shipâs engine was overheated. You still want to go back to Federation space?â
The pilot paused. âYouâre really going to fly this thing?â
Vermond turned, eyes glowing with faint green and black currents. âWeâre leaving this place.â
Behind them, the ship groaned with life as undead pilots manned strange, glowing consoles. The destroyer began to rise, flame and dust kicking up below it. Screams echoed faintlyâechoes of the past or memories burned into the shipâs walls.
The undead destroyer had awakened... and now, it soared.
The massive undead destroyer soared through the upper atmosphere, tearing clouds apart as if it were reclaiming the heavens it had once ruled. Vermond stood at the edge of the command bridge, the pale green glow of necrotic energy tracing every edge of the control panels. He could feel the structure respond to his thoughts nowâsluggish, uncertain, but undeniably linked to him.
The pilot sat rigid near one of the side terminals, glancing at the flickering screens, hands shaking. âThis⦠this isnât a ship. Itâs a tomb,â he muttered under his breath, trying not to look at the undead crew silently working their old stations. Not one of them acknowledged his presence. Not one breathed. They moved, reactedâsome even typed into terminals with bony fingers or spectral handsâbut not a single sound came from them.
âI donât even know how Iâm doing this,â Vermond admitted quietly, his eyes scanning the unnatural architecture. âItâs like the ship listens⦠but it doesnât trust me.â
Then the main screen lit up, unprompted. A faded image appeared, crackling with static. The pilot flinched, instinctively backing up. Vermond narrowed his eyes and stepped forward.
The recording played.
It showed a once-living crew, all wearing black and green uniforms with a strange sigilâone Vermond had never seen before. They were laughing, eating, running drills. A captain stood proudly at the helm, issuing commands.
Cut.
Alarms blared. The crew ran. Shadows danced in the halls. The camera feed shook. A voiceâtwisted, distortedâechoed: âYour souls⦠are mine.â
Screams followed. The halls turned red. Crew members clawed at their throats, their eyes glowing faintly green before falling one by one.
Then, silence.
The same crew returnedâundead, their flesh pale or missing, taking their former posts. The captainânow gaunt, skeletal, but still wearing his uniformâstood again at the helm. âThe Necromancer King⦠commands us,â he whispered.
The screen cut to black.
Vermond stared at it in stunned silence. âThere were⦠more,â he whispered. âThis wasnât the only ship.â
âY-You mean thereâs a fleet?â the pilot said in disbelief.
âSomewhere out there,â Vermond replied. âI donât think even the Federation or anyone knows what theyâre dealing with.â
He walked across the bridge, brushing his hand over the glowing runes on the walls. âBut this one⦠this oneâs mine now.â
As if in response, a low hum echoed through the destroyerâlike a heartbeat. The undead moved a little sharper. The green lights burned just a little brighter.
From deep inside the ship, a door hissed open.
Vermond and the pilot looked toward it, a faint mist pouring from the hallway beyond. Somewhere within the corridors, whispers stirred once again.
The undead destroyer drifted silently through space like a phantom leviathan, its blackened hull casting a shadow over the drifting derelict ahead. Inside, the pilot sat stiffly in the co-pilot seat, hands clenched, sweat trailing down his forehead. No words came from his lipsâonly a quiet, terrified stare aimed at the man standing before the panoramic window.
Vermond.
His eyes scanned the derelict vessel ahead. It was nothing special. No power signatures. No distress signals. No signs of life. But it called to him.
Salvage it...
It was instinctualâengraved into his bones by years working alongside his grandfather. The itch of potential value. The whisper of machinery that could be repurposed. No matter the changes, the deaths, or the unholy powers that now pulsed in his veins... that instinct hadn't died.
Without a word, the destroyer turned.
He hadnât issued a command.
The helm moved on its own.
The pilot swallowed.
On the lower levels, hatches groaned open. From within the interior depths, they emergedâundead soldiers donned in faded EVA suits. The suits had been modified, re-stitched with unknown black fibers that seemed to pulse slightly in zero gravity. Their helmets bore glowing green visors, yet no breath fogged the inside. No voice. No sound.
They simply obeyed.
As Vermond stepped toward the airlock, the undead followed himâmoving in eerie synchrony.
He didnât even speak.
They simply knew what he wanted.
Onboard the derelict, the silence was absolute. The lights were flickering, the air stale but breathable. Vermond floated through the hallway with his undead behind him, their hands already picking apart broken systems, collecting power cells, and stacking food containers still preserved in sealed canisters.
The pilot watched from the destroyerâs bridge feedâmouth dry.
They stripped the radar array first. Then some salvageable plating. It felt normal... yet unnatural.
This wasnât a crew.
This was an extension of him.
One of the undead brought over a cracked control panel. Vermond didnât speak, but it moved exactly where he was looking. His fingers brushed it. âItâs still warm.â
He turned to the others.
âGet the reactor logs. Anything usable.â
They moved immediately.
The pilot whispered to himself. âHe didnât even speak...â
Hours passed.
Once their work was done, the undead returned to the destroyer, dragging crates and gear with them. They moved not like monstersâbut like trained engineers. Methodical. Efficient. Dead.
And somewhere deep in the shipâs cold hull...
...the watcher smiled.
Inside the belly of the undead destroyer, the stench of rust, oil, and something far more ancient filled the air. It was a silence broken only by the creaking of metal and the subtle hum of the ship's barely functional systems. The cargo bay doors slammed shut behind the undead, their arms full of salvaged materialsâtwisted steel, cracked panels, spare power cells, and broken control consoles. Despite their grotesque forms, they moved like they remembered what it meant to serve aboard a ship.
Vermond stood in the central hub, his eyes tracking every motion. He hadnât told them what to do. He didnât have to. They simply knew.
A long corridor flickered to life as power rerouted from the recovered generators. The lights didnât glow whiteâthey burned green, casting sickly shadows that danced like spirits across the walls.
The pilot, still wary, wandered out of the cockpit and into the central deck, wide-eyed. âThey're... fixing the ship?â
Vermond nodded, slowly. âThey know what to do. What I want. Even before I say it.â
Bolts clanged. Wires sparked. One undead crawled along the ceiling, fusing a salvaged panel over a fractured bulkhead. Another loaded power cells into a rusty chamber, which pulsed onceâbringing an entire segment of the ship back online. Screens glitched into view, showing diagnostics, incomplete star maps, and fragmented crew logs.
The pilot flinched as he passed a group of three undead who were repairing a corridor wall. Their helmets turned to him in unison. For a moment, he thought they were alive inside those suits. Then he saw the movement behind the visorsâblack fog and hollow light.
âThey're... almost human,â he whispered.
Vermond didnât answer. He moved deeper into the ship, passing strange sigils etched into the walls. Ones that pulsed when he passed them.
In one section, a long-dead medical bay reactivated. A holographic log flickered to life, corrupted by age and data loss. But one clip remained.
:: Log Entry - Necrofleet Vengeance Protocol - Commander Vassk ::
The image showed a man screaming as his own crew tore him apartânot out of madness, but ritual. A hooded figure watched, seated on a throne of bones.
Then darkness.
The pilot stumbled back. âThis ship... belonged to a necromancer king?â
Vermond stared, eyes glowing faintly. âOne of many. But where the others are... I donât know.â
The destroyer groaned as systems continued to come back onlineâsome functioning, some unnervingly altered.
And the undead continued to work.
As if rebuilding a ghost from the past.
The soft hum of the undead destroyer's engines pulsed through the vast silence of space. Within its shadowy interior, Vermond leaned against the cold, ribbed wall of the command chamber, staring at the endless stars beyond the fractured glass viewport.
Eerie silence hung between them until Vermond finally broke it.
"Do you want to join me?" he asked, voice steady, but quiet.
The pilot blinked in surprise. He had been seated near the emergency panel, nervously observing the skeletal crew as they moved with uncanny coordinationâtightening bolts, connecting wires, repairing walls, and adjusting internal systems like engineers of old.
"I⦠I donât know," the pilot replied after a pause. "I still donât understand all of this." He glanced at the undead crew. One passed by, its spacesuit still smudged with soot and scratches from the surface battle, its helmet cracked but filled with hollow, glowing light.
Vermond turned to him, his expression unreadable. "What's your name?"
The pilot swallowed and answered, "Ereie."
Vermond nodded. "Nice to meet you, Ereie."
Ereie looked down, his voice filled with conflict. "I'm sorry, Vermond. My loyalty to the Federation⦠it's not something I can just toss aside. But I⦠I wonât say anything. Not about you, not about this ship." His eyes scanned the eerie architecture around them. "They wouldnât believe me anyway."
Vermond offered a faint smile, just a ghost of one. "Thatâs good enough."
The ship drifted further into the void, the last flickers of the distant planet now only a speck in the background. Within the hallways of the destroyer, the undead still labored. Their movements were soundless save for the clicking of boots against metal grates and the hiss of automated systems being brought back online.
The salvaged food containers had been placed into the mess hallânow retrofitted into something usable. It was a strange sight: Ereie, a living man, cautiously biting into preserved rations while skeletal figures sat motionless around him, pretending to eat from trays they didn't need.
Vermond watched from a distance, his mind split between amusement and sorrow. He still didnât fully understand how the crew responded to him so perfectly, as if they heard his very thoughts.
But there was one thing he knew:
This ship, these souls, this silenceâthey were his now.
And ahead, the stars waited.