âIt was built in the unsettled and useless parts of the planet, inside the largest palladium deposit in the galaxy,â Ptolemy explained. âItâs made with more palladium than any other object, but we still needed more. We found the platinum on the planetâs far side. The palladium we kept secret, the platinum we could not.â
âIts position opposite the crack should enhance its protection from a hypothetical explosion at the planetâs core,â Sisi explained.
Natalya saw the skeletons of buildings as they orbited above Tarantula, black and white in the x-ray viewscreens. She was surprised anything was left standing on the ruined planet, but didnât have to look for long. They approached the barren landscape, passed the ruins of Sisiâs research lab, where the space station was buried. Natalya had Ptolemy switch back to normal view.
A mountain of molten rock loomed beneath them, made from waste metal that added to the natural formation to make room for the space station underneath. Augustus flew Chimera toward the heart of the round-topped mountain range, where a set of doors opened at the bottom of a wide chasm.
Chimera hovered above the opening and slowly began its descent.
âHow was the space station supposed to take off?â Natalya asked.
âThis whole mountain range is rigged to explode. Much easier than building doors,â Ptolemy explained. âAlso would have hidden the stationâs departure.â
âGood idea,â Co said.
The tunnel lit up, heralding their approach to the upside-down pyramid. After several minutes of descent, the tunnel ended in a sea of darkness. Chimera hovered to a halt, lights activating all around them.
The viewscreens showed a vast, flat plain of silvery metal, cranes and long-armed construction equipment ringing it in the domed chamber. A thin gap between the station and the hollow dock allowed Natalya to see all the way to its tapered point. Three shimmering metal rings wrapped around the pyramid at equidistant points around its sides.
âThe opal-plants are in the heart of the station. It doesnât move fast, but it can go opalescent and stay that way for a long time,â Ptolemy explained.
Sisiâs mouth hadnât closed since the pyramid came into view. She started coughing after her throat had gone dry.
A hole opened on top of the pyramid. Several dozen doors were spaced along the wide hull, docks and loading bays and cannon no doubt, some of the docks big enough to hold a capital ship.
Augustus guided Chimera inside the dock, where glimmering metal arms spread from the sides to take hold of the ship and cushion its landing.
âKeep the engine running, Augustus, we donât have much time,â Natalya said, and led the way out the bridge.
âHave fun arming your planet bomb,â Augustus replied.
âNo need for enviro-suits,â Ptolemy explained as they stood in front Chimeraâs wing-side airlock. Ptolemy opened the hatch and breathed deep, the artificial atmosphere inside the space station apparently still operational.
The crew departed Chimera and made their way through the dock, overhead lights flicking on as they reached an elevator. Sisi escorted the Key Core, the safe hovering before her welpro.
âPretty cramped,â Co noted as they squeezed inside the elevator.
âMost of this station is opal-plants and energy relays. Its accommodations are⦠pragmatic,â Ptolemy explained.
âIâm surprised thereâs room for a chair if it can really Prosper-form a planet by itself,â Sisi noted as the elevator came to a halt.
The doors opened onto a pyramid-shaped chamber with thick metal pylons lining its sides and floors. A four-sided console sat in the center of the room. Monitors and more consoles occupied three of the walls. The fourth wall was empty, but a cylinder descended out of the roomâs tip and projected a holographic image of the space station in the bare front section.
Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.
âThis is the command center,â Ptolemy explained, the consoles lighting up to show the status of every opal-plant, emitter, and relay on the station. âEverything on the station is controlled through here, with access terminals in other sections only for repair and maintenance purposes, which were designed to be unnecessary under nearly all conditions.â
âNeat,â Sisi said, and ran to the center console, eyes soaking in the information. âAnd this is where the Key Core goes!â
Sisi pressed a button and a hole opened in the middle of the consoles.
âOh, I wish Iâd brought Pili. That penguin would love to see this,â Sisi exclaimed.
âForget the penguin and help me with this,â Ptolemy said as he opened the safe. Together they revealed a polished, metal cylinder. It seemed unimpressive to Natalya, since theyâd worked so hard to get it, but the pill-shaped Key Core was still heavy enough that Sisi needed her welpro to load it into the consoleâs opening.
As the Key Core descended into the stationâs controls, the holographic pyramid swung around, systems flashing their status.
âRelays coming online,â Ptolemy said as he took a position at the center console. âKey Core functioning.â
Ptolemy exhaled.
âWas there a doubt?â Natalya asked.
âThereâs always a doubt,â Ptolemy replied. âBut in this case, weâre fine. For now. Pul, if youâre going to do what youâre going to do, hereâs the shield emitters. Co, weapons.â
Ptolemy pointed out where people needed to be and what needed to be done. Pul nodded, impressed with the infrastructure, but still proceeded to tear out a few wires. Even though it looked like he was breaking the command center rather than helping, the shield and power systems soon read beyond normal levels, adding energy to every sector of the ship.
âNot too much, we need to make sure the power doesnât blow out the cascade system,â Sisi instructed as the crew prepared the station.
Natalya helped where she could as Sisi readied the emitters to magnetize and compress Farbindâs core.
âEmitters orienting,â Sisi said. The rings on the holographic pyramid lit up, power surging through the station.
âStarting Prosper-forming cascade,â Ptolemy said.
âProsper de-forming,â Sisi corrected.
âWe need a better word for that,â Pul noted.
âRepsorp!â
âWhatâs that mean?â
âItâs Prosper backwards.â
âIâm not saying that word.â
âStarting Repsorp,â Sisi said.
Pul rolled his eyes as the hologram flashed. Lights along the pyramidâs edges flickered in time with the rings, the pulses growing faster and faster until the whole station glowed. Then the lights went out, and the three rings pulsated in a steady rhythm.
âDid anything happen?â Co asked, looking around.
âDid anything happen! We just Repsorped this whole planet!â Sisi replied.
âCascade magnetization of the planetâs core is progressing,â Ptolemy announced, watching the readings roll off his console. âIt should reach critical mass in three hours.â
âIt takes a year for the station to Prosper-form a planet, and hours to destroy one,â Jasper stated, shaking his head.
âFarbindâs circumstances are different, but as is true with most instances, it is far easier to destroy than it is to create.â
Ptolemy coded in more commands and a cylinder rose from the console in front of him, revealing a red button hidden beneath a glass lid. Ptolemy lifted the lid and said, âThis will light up when the final de-Prosper-formingââ
âRepsorping,â Sisi corrected.
âWhen the final energy burst is ready. Right now, the emitters are manipulating the magnetosphere. This button will release the cascade energy that would normally ignite a planetâs surface and begin the creation of an atmosphere. But in this case, it will ignite the core.â
âAnd youâre staying behind to activate it?â Natalya asked. âWeâll need everyone in on this, Ptolemy. I donât think we can spare you.â
âThe trigger can be made remotely,â Ptolemy said. âWeâll send the signal from Chimera. Itâs safer that way anyway, in case Pulâs adjustments to the shields donât work. Iâd rather my station blow up with Farbind than we go with it.â
âIâm confident weâve made all necessary precautions,â Pul said.
âI hope youâre right, Pul. And I hopeâ¦â Ptolemy stopped, stiffening his back and taking a breath as he looked each of the crewmembers in the eye. âI hope youâll forgive me. I have deceived some of you, manipulated most of you. Qin may have abused us, but I have not been the best⦠companion in our journeys. Natalya, Jasper, you two most of all. I hope that what we do today makes up for the mistakes Iâve made.â
âYouâre not the only one seeking redemption,â Pul added. âIf weâre apologizing, Iâll do it too. I donât need an apology from any of you, not if we succeed, though I do appreciate the gesture.â
âYou guys are a bunch of sissies,â Co said.
âHey!â Sisi replied.
âI said sissies, not Sisis.â
âOh.â
âLetâs just blow up a planet and get things done. We can hug after.â
âI agree,â Jasper said, smiling at Natalya. âRegardless of what brought us here, weâre here. And weâll do this together.â
Ptolemy nodded. Pul and Natalya did as well.
âPtolemy, whatâs the name of this space station?â Natalya asked.
âNever had a name,â Ptolemy answered.
âLetâs call it Steve!â Sisi announced.
âThatâs a horrible name,â Co countered.
âDuke,â Natalya said with a grin. âI was Duke of Farbind. I started this war. And the Duke will finish it.â
âI hope thatâs true,â Ptolemy said. âWeâll have to delay painting the name on, though.â
âWe can still make it official. I christen you, Duke!â Sisi said. She punched the wall of the command center like she was breaking a bottle. âOw.â