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Chapter 13 - The Shape of the Enemy: Payload Unknown

  A week had passed in a blur of routines and careful balancing acts.

  Akiko had settled into her role in operations—tedious, yes, but mercifully stable. The constant flow of tasks provided rhythm, and with occasional nudges from her unseen helper, she stayed one step ahead of exposure.

  Anna’s chatter filled the mornings and evenings like a protective spell, her boundless energy keeping Akiko’s doubts from closing in. Ethan still surfaced now and then with his usual charm—an offered smile, a shared meal, a glint of mischief.

  Cassandra’s glares remained a constant. But the captain, First Officer Hale, and Chief Hayes? Akiko made sure to steer well clear.

  It wasn’t safe. But it was manageable.

  For now.

  As the Sovereign neared Stygia’s gravitational reach, the mood aboard the ship began to shift.

  The hum of the engines remained steady, but tension crept in—tightening conversations, sharpening movements. Stygia loomed in the central displays: a dark, scorched planet, its crust gouged open by centuries of mining. The planet was ringed in ash and debris, its silhouette broken by jagged refineries and flickering orbital clutter.

  Akiko sat at her terminal, watching the main display cycle through approach telemetry. The abandoned station floated just ahead—tethered to a hollowed-out asteroid, marked on the screen with a pulsing red glow.

  She didn’t know what she expected. But something twisted in her chest as she studied the silhouette.

  Mark’s words echoed again—about the prisoners, the children, the ghosts born into labor and left behind.

  This mission wasn’t random. It was rooted in something deeper. Something rotten.

  A faint beep drew her attention.

  Her terminal updated, displaying new data: orbital vectors, velocity readouts, and projected burn windows. She understood some of it now. Not all. But enough.

  A small winking emoji pulsed beside a highlighted line of text.

  Akiko breathed out.

  “Thanks,” she whispered, barely audible.

  The ship shifted.

  The weight dropped out of her body the engine shut down, the hull transitioning into freefall. Her harness kept her anchored, but the sudden float of her limbs made her grip the armrest tighter.

  Around her, the atmosphere thickened.

  Cassandra stood near the central console, her voice cool and clipped.

  “Final retro-burn in thirty seconds. All stations, report readiness.”

  The chorus of confirmations echoed in swift succession.

  Akiko added her voice to the mix.

  Her screen updated—trajectory arcs shifting, the station’s outline now filling nearly a third of the display. It looked like a wound in space. All sharp edges and hollow corridors. No lights. No signals.

  “That thing looks dead,” someone muttered. “No power, no transmissions. How does a place like that go completely dark?”

  “Focus,” Cassandra snapped. “We’ll know more once we’re in orbit. Until then, keep your stations clear.”

  Akiko frowned.

  Her eyes lingered on the glowing marker—just a circle of light. But something in her gut twisted.

  The station felt… wrong. Not just derelict. Not just decayed. Wrong in a way she couldn’t name.

  And as the Sovereign slid into the dark, silent orbit of the mining complex, that wrongness pressed against her skin like static.

  She didn’t know what they were about to find. But it was waiting for them.

  The engines roared back to life, pressing Akiko lightly into her seat as the Sovereign slowed.

  The return of weight after even a brief moment of freefall felt strange—unnatural. She shifted in her harness, muscles tense, trying to shake the lingering disorientation.

  “We’re entering the station’s operational sphere,” Cassandra announced, her voice clipped and taut. “Everyone stay sharp.”

  The hum of the engines deepened. It vibrated through the floor panels and into Akiko’s spine—a steady, physical reminder of just how vulnerable they were during deceleration.

  Her terminal lit up.

  New telemetry. Orbital data. Trajectory arcs spiraling around the dead station ahead, its orbit just grazing Stygia’s gravity well. The planet loomed like a scar across the sky—shadowed, scarred, indifferent.

  A sharp tone split the air.

  A warning icon flashed crimson across the main display. Akiko’s terminal followed suit, red markers bursting across the station’s surface in a flurry of motion. Her breath caught.

  One of the markers pulsed, circled by a familiar emoji—this one bearing an oversized exclamation point.

  “Multiple bogeys detected,” someone called out, their voice rising. “They’re launching from the station!”

  Cassandra stepped forward, voice slicing through the rising panic. “Stay calm. Analyze the trajectories. Classify the targets.”

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  Akiko stared at her terminal.

  The markers were moving—fast. Too fast. Too coordinated.

  The main screen updated. Small, dart-like shapes burst from the station, arcing outward with surgical precision.

  Drones.

  Not salvage bots. Not debris. Drones, with intent.

  “Armed,” Cassandra confirmed grimly. “Operations, prepare for evasive maneuvers.”

  Akiko’s heart pounded. Her gaze stayed locked on the swarm.

  The drones glowed.

  Not the sterile blue of standard propulsion systems. Not the red of heat bleed. Something else—a flickering aura that shimmered across their hulls like light through water.

  The sight stirred something deep inside her. Recognition. Not from this world.

  The shimmer reminded her of Kaede’s strongest incantations—magic woven into form, burning with purpose. Controlled. Commanded.

  Her stomach turned.

  Magic, she thought. Real magic. Here.

  The implications were staggering, but there was no time to dwell on them. The drones were closing in.

  “This just got a lot more complicated,” she muttered, gripping the edge of her console.

  Around her, crew members moved quickly—strapping in, securing gear, checking systems with practiced precision. Akiko moved with them, hands tightening the straps across her shoulders and waist.

  She remembered her first day aboard—the chaos, the unanchored panic, being tossed like debris during the ship’s maneuvers.

  Not again.

  Cassandra’s voice rang out. “Orders from command. All stations, prepare for combat delta-v maneuvers. Tactical analysis to follow.”

  Akiko braced herself.

  The tactical display updated. The swarm bloomed across the screen—dozens of red markers twisting and darting, weaving erratic patterns through space. The Sovereign’s trajectory remained smooth and calculated—an island of order in a rising storm.

  More data spilled across her terminal. Velocity changes. Energy emissions. Predictive threat arcs.

  And in the corner—an emoji appeared. Wide eyes. One bead of sweat.

  Akiko let out a dry breath. “Tell me about it.”

  The ship surged beneath her.

  The engines fired hard, pinning her back in her seat. The artificial gravity cut in and out in erratic pulses as the Sovereign juked, spun, repositioned.

  Pressure pressed into her chest. Her limbs trembled from the force.

  “Drone trajectories locked,” Cassandra reported. “Coordinated swarm behavior confirmed. Weapons systems online, but…”

  A pause. Just long enough to tighten the room.

  “…preliminary scans show anomalous energy signatures. We’re cross-referencing.”

  Akiko stared at her screen.

  Anomalous, she thought. They didn’t have the words for it yet. Not here.

  But she did.

  Magic.

  And it was getting closer.

  The Sovereign shifted again, inertia dragging Akiko sideways as the ship angled into a new trajectory. Her harness caught the worst of it, but her shoulder still slammed into the console’s edge.

  Outside, the drones danced.

  On-screen, they darted like angry wasps—erratic, precise, too fast to track with standard systems. Each red dot traced a chaotic path across the display, weaving through the Sovereign’s defenses like they already knew the gaps.

  “Operations, maintain focus,” Cassandra snapped. “Command wants pattern analysis now.”

  The ship jolted again. Point defenses fired in sharp bursts, the deck vibrating with each impact. Akiko barely noticed. Her eyes stayed locked on the screen.

  “Point defenses active, but effectiveness is low,” Cassandra called out. “Hull integrity at eighty percent. Heat sinks climbing—energy saturation nearing critical.”

  Akiko winced as another blast of acceleration pressed her into the seat. Her harness bit into her collarbone. The tactical display blurred under flickering updates.

  The drones weren’t breaking.

  Kinetic rounds bounced off their shields. Focused shots barely slowed them. And all the while, their return fire bit deep into the Sovereign’s hull, melting armor like wax under a torch.

  Her terminal flashed.

  One of the drones—slightly larger, circled in glowing red. An animated swirl hovered beside it, pulsing like a miniature storm.

  Akiko frowned.

  “What are you trying to show me?” she whispered.

  She tapped the display, isolating the drone for a visual feed.

  It flickered, then resolved—sleek, angular, moving with unnatural grace. But what stopped her breath wasn’t its speed or shape.

  It was the runes.

  Etched across the hull, glowing faintly against the black, an intricate lattice of magical symbols pulsed with internal power. Not exactly like Kaede’s diagrams, but close. Familiar in a way that bypassed intellect and struck something deeper.

  They weren’t tech. They weren’t code. They were spells.

  Her heart stuttered.

  Kaede tried to teach me this, she thought. I never understood it. Never felt it.

  But now she did.

  The patterns weren’t just decorative. They pulsed in harmony with the swarm, anchoring their motion. Binding them. The shimmer across their hulls—the coordination, the shields—it all radiated from this one.

  A control node. A keystone. The others fed off its signal. Its magic. And it was exposed.

  Akiko’s eyes narrowed.

  “That’s it,” she whispered. “That’s what’s holding the swarm together.”

  Behind her, Cassandra’s voice cut in.

  “Operations—status update?”

  Akiko hesitated for half a second.

  Then: “I’ve found something.”

  Her voice held firm. Her fingers flew across the terminal.

  “One of the drones—it’s larger, different. The energy signatures are… concentrated. It’s anchoring the others. If we take it out, it might collapse their formation.”

  Cassandra’s gaze snapped to her. “Show me.”

  Akiko transmitted the visual.

  The main screen shifted, pulling the image into focus. The runes shimmered across the hull like veins of light.

  Cassandra’s lips tightened.

  “Unusual signatures confirmed. Command, Operations has identified a potential critical target. Marking now.”

  Akiko exhaled—slow, controlled.

  She didn’t know what this magic was, or where it came from. But she understood enough.

  It can be broken. And that was enough to fight.

  The Sovereign lurched violently as one of its missiles launched, the ignition rumbling through the ship’s frame like thunder through steel.

  Akiko’s terminal updated immediately, tracking the arc as the projectile streaked toward the central drone. Its path was clean—a smooth, deliberate curve, locked on target with unwavering precision.

  She held her breath.

  The drone reacted.

  It darted through the void in wild, jagged bursts—its delta-v maneuvers impossibly sharp. Light flared across its runes, glowing brighter with every shift. Shields rippled. Space bent.

  But the missile stayed locked. It adjusted course mid-burn, cutting across the drone’s desperate movements with mechanical resolve.

  Then—impact.

  A burst of light seared across the display.

  The feed whited out for a breathless moment, and when it cleared, the central drone was gone. Only scattered fragments drifted in its place, glowing faintly before fading into the void.

  Akiko exhaled, a sharp breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding.

  Across the deck, the energy shifted.

  The swarm faltered. Their movements lost the impossible cohesion that had made them so deadly. Point defenses kicked in with brutal efficiency—one drone down, then another, then three more in rapid bursts.

  Someone shouted, “They’re breaking! Picking them off one by one!”

  Even Cassandra allowed herself a thin nod.

  Akiko didn’t celebrate.

  A faint tingle crept across her skin—magic, but distant. Unrooted. It wasn’t the runes, or the wreckage. It was something deeper. Bigger. Watching.

  Her helper was silent.

  No emoji. No marker. Nothing.

  She glanced at the tactical display. The station loomed behind the wreckage—massive, cold, and unlit. It hadn’t moved. It hadn’t done anything.

  But the sensation in her chest said otherwise.

  “There’s something else,” she whispered, voice barely audible over the hum of the deck. “I can feel it.”

  Her terminal flared to life.

  A new contact appeared—faint at first, barely a ghost on the sensors. Then the shimmer peeled back, like a curtain lifting.

  A frigate.

  Larger than anything the drones should’ve had. Roughly the size of the Sovereign, but where the Sovereign was all angles and polish, this vessel was jagged, assembled. Scavenged plating. Asymmetrical hull. Layers of armor welded like scar tissue over old wounds.

  Yet it bristled with weapons. And every turret—every seam—was etched in glowing runes.

  Not just like the drones. Worse. Denser. Hungrier.

  A silence fell over the operations deck.

  “That’s... not standard,” someone muttered.

  Cassandra’s voice cut cleanly through. “Incoming threat detected. All stations, brace for evasive maneuvers. Command is assessing the target.”

  The Sovereign groaned as the engines flared again, pushing them into a sharp arc. Akiko gritted her teeth, muscles locking against the surge.

  Her terminal updated.

  A new marker. Incoming.

  Missile.

  Its path streaked across the screen like a dagger, locked tight onto the Sovereign’s signature.

  “That’s not a standard warhead,” Cassandra said grimly. “Energy readings are off the charts. Operations—I want full analysis, now.”

  Akiko’s fingers hovered.

  The missile wasn’t glowing like a heat signature. It pulsed. Magic—not just a shell, not just shielding. Alive.

  A sweating emoji popped into the corner of her screen. A moment later, data cascaded in—energy fluctuations, destabilization curves, a flickering icon that could only mean: payload unknown.

  Akiko stared at it.

  “This isn’t just a missile,” she whispered. “It’s something worse.”

  The ship twisted violently again. High-G. She slammed back into her seat, console rattling beneath her hands.

  The glow on the missile intensified.

  Her helper flashed another symbol to her screen—biting its nails.

  Cassandra barked, “Operations, what is that thing?”

  Akiko glanced at the display feed.

  The missile gleamed—its surface alive with runes, wrapped in a pulsing blue-white nimbus that shimmered with each moment of acceleration.

  Then—

  Impact.

  The deck shuddered. Akiko braced, waiting for the blast. The tearing screech of breached hull. The scream of alarms.

  But instead…

  Silence.

  The lights flickered. Once. Twice. Then darkness.

  The thrum of the engines—gone. No vibration. No pressure.

  Even the quiet hum of life support vanished.

  Akiko stared into the dim screen, her breath loud in the stillness.

  No alarms. No voices. The Sovereign was no longer moving.

  And in the dark, something waited.

  Akiko’s heart pounded in her ears as she stared at her terminal, willing it to wake up.

  The screen remained dark—cold, reflective, echoing her stunned expression.

  Around her, the operations deck dissolved into chaos.

  “What the hell just happened?” someone shouted.

  “Total systems failure!” another called. “No power, no guidance!”

  Akiko clutched the edges of her console, grounding herself against the weightless drift. The silence, the darkness, the weightlessness—it was like being stranded in the void.

  She replayed the moment of impact, again and again.

  That missile hadn’t been built to destroy. It had been built to disable.

  Her helper’s emoji stream was gone. Cut off. Silenced.

  She felt it like the loss of breath in her lungs.

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