My body trembles in the aftermath of the giantโs departure. Steadying myself, I turn back to the Blues, who stand transfixed, unsure of whether to look to me or the HC displays or the scanners that show the Sovereignโs men-of-war encircling us. โYou have nothing to fear here,โ I say. โThe captain of this ship was demoted because he left his viewports open. Foolishly. Rank does not excuse mistakes. I wish for a new captain. We havenโt much time. So I will decide in sixty seconds.โ
The proud-shouldered Blue comes forward past her fellows. At first, I thought the tattoos on her hands featured floral lines. Then I note a stream of mathematical notations: the Larmor formula. Maxwellโs equations in curved-space time. Wheeler-Feynman absorber theory. And a hundred others that even I donโt recognize.
โGive me the badge and Iโll carve you a hole back to Mars, boy.โ Her voice has no inflection. It is flat. Precise and lazy all at once. Emotion bled out of it till only the letters and sounds of the words remain like equations in the air. โI swear it on my life.โ
โ โBoyโ?โ I ask.
โYouโre half my age. Shall I call you โlord boyโ? Or will you be offended?โ
Sevro raises an eyebrow, flummoxed at the Blueโs bland audacity.
โForgive her,ย dominus,โ another Blue says smoothly. โShe is an
ensign withโโ
I hold up a hand. โWhatโs your name, Blue?โ โOrion xe Aquarii.โ
โThatโs a boyโs name,โ Sevro says.
โIs it? I hadnโt noticed.โ Blues can be sarcastic? โMy Sect intended for me to be a man. I surprised them.โ
โWhat Sect?โ Sevro asks.
โShe has no Sect. She was appropriated by the Copernican Sect, but dismissed shortly thereafter, for obvious reasons,โ that o cious Blue interrupts again. โSheโs a Docker.โ
Orion flinches. She swivels on the other Blue. Her voice does not rise. โAnd what are you but a pedantic little gasp of a fart, Pelus? Hm?โ
โYou see,โ Pelus explains placidly, โshe is a Docker. Emotional metrics are unmanageable. Not her fault. She is a product of herย greasyย environment.โ
โBolly that,โ she says, stepping forward quickly.
She punches Pelus in the face. He wails, falling backward like heโs never been hit before. Likely because he hasnโt. Why would a Blue hit another Blue? Theyโre test takers, math makers, star charters. Not fighters.
โI like the rude one,โ Sevro says.
โWait,ย dominus! I desire the ship!โ Another Blue slides forward, staring at Pelus on the ground. โI โฆ I deserve it. Orion is no more than a โฆ a โฆ laggard! Her mastery of astrophysics leaves much to be desired, to say little of her understanding of extraplanetary mass kinetics. She didnโt even attend the Observatory.โ
Another Blue pushes forward.
โForget Arnus! Heโs a dodderhead at astrophysics and his assumptions in theoretical calculus are imprudent at best! I was second in command of this vessel for six months under the Ash Lord. I served upon it while it was in its dry berth. Logic supports the maneuver to place me as your captain,ย dominus.โ
The armadaโs ships continue to hail us over the coms. Men-of- war slide closer. Inside their bellies, brave men and women will be donning suits of armor; theyโll board leechCraft and shoot into space to land on my hull, burrow their way through, praying that they will make it home to have a meal made by their mother, their spouse. All that while my Blues shove and push to lead my
ship, howling insults at one anotherโs math skills and academic integrity.
โDonโt listen to either of them,ย dominus!โ shouts a woman in
that slow accent. She falls to her knees. โMy name is Virga xe Sedierta. I have studied the physics of astral drift in the Midnight Schoolโfar superior to the Observatory. I hold, among others, a doctorate on dark matter and gravitational lensing. Let me guide your vessel,ย dominus. To decide in favor of another would be specious and worse: illogical!โ
These Blues should have used their logic and seen that I look only at the woman who does not kneel like the rest of them. Orion, the first to speak, still stands, shoulders square, long neck unbent. Her dialect is lowborn, sharper, and more worldly than the dreamy lingo of these academics. Likely from the dock city of Phobos or the String Docks near the Academyโs Can. If she really is a Docker who didnโt go to the Observatory or the Midnight School, I wonder about the story of how she came to be on the bridge in the first place.
โWhat about all that noise?โ I ask Orion, gesturing to the Blues. โTheyโre full of batshit,ย dominus.โ She taps a slender finger against her temple. โI am not full of batshit.โ She smiles and nods to the displays where the other torchShips creep closer. โAnd youโre running out of time.โ I glance to the scanner stations where alerts signal the secretive launch of two leechCraft from the Sovereignโs nearby men-of-war and cruisers. โI know I can do
this, otherwise I would not have spoken out.ย Give me a chance.โ
I nod to Sevro and he tosses her the captainโs winged star. โGet us to our fleet.โ
โRules of engagement?โ she asks me.
โMinimal casualties,โ I say. โWe are good. The Sovereign is the tyrant. That is how this must play.โ
โAye,ย dominus.โ
I watch with Sevro as Orion takes command of my ship and sets orders to rendezvous with Augustusโs ships beyond the Rubicon Beacons. The squabbling stops as soon as I appoint Orion. They know their chance has passed, so they slip into their comfortable roles as though they wished theyโd never left them.
Their blue Sigils look like tridents against their forearms in this dimmed lighting.
Thereโs a curious remoteness to Blues. An island people in the abyss of space, they were designed to survive the long journeys from Luna without mutiny. So they share. They share the same oxygen, the same food, the same bunks, the same routines, the same pits, the same commanders, the same lovers, the same Sects, the same ambitionsโto do their job with precision and rise high through merit so that they might honor their Sect.
I open a com channel to the rest of the fleet and the satellites of Luna. They canโt stop the signal. Not of this ship. Our arrays are as sophisticated as any in the Sovereignโs navy.
โSons and daughters of Society. This is Darrow au Andromedus of the House Augustus. I bring terrible tidings. Tonight, your Sovereign has broken the Compact of our Society. As my master, ArchGovernor Nero au Augustus, slept under her protection, she made attempt upon his life, the lives of his family, and those of his Praetors and aides. Along with the Bellona, she attempted the illegal and immoral murder of more than thirty Peerless Scarred. She failed.
โIn retaliation, I have taken one of her flagships. And I am now besieged, with my life, as well as those of my master and his family, at risk. If we do not fight back, we will die. If we surrender, we will die. I have not vented the ship. Those aboard have seen the merit of my cause and have allied themselves with a family that would resist the power-hungry tyrant Octavia au Lune.โ
Close enough to the truth.
โHours ago, our Sovereign told me to betray my house. To betray my vows. Like her father before her, she is drunk on power and now believes herself Empress. She told us to bow, witness now our reply.โ
I turn the com off.
โMr. Pelus, as you will,โ Orion declares. โLet the bastards have it when they come.โ She activates her own tattoos and sinks into digital speak with the rest of the crew.
The bridge is silent. A second ticks by, another. On the HC, I watch three Grays shoot a Gold in the head. In the hangars,
Oranges huddle to the side as Golds lead warColors against the downed stork. Then Ragnar arrives in the hangar, and the Oranges rally around him, as do armed Reds, whoโve followed him from the halls. Many die. Something furious grips these Colors. And though they die, I feel the flickering of rebellion as I give them permission to do what theyโve wanted to do their entire lives. Itโs there, even if you never see it till the endโthat spark of individuality, of freedom. The door of the stork pops open and Mustang charges out with my Howlers to aid the lowColors and Ragnar, though even the Telemanuses keep their distance from the monstrous man.
Beyond my vessel, the enemy ships finally show their menace. The scanners swell with red. Enemies, leechCraft freshly spilt from the bellies of the armada around us, streak through space to find our hull. They aim to take us by storm.
Orion opens broadsides.
โItโs so beautiful,โ Sevro murmurs. I stand in silence. Railgun payloads slam through leechCraft, shearing away metal and men, only to carry on and smash into the hulls and shields of the same men-of-war that launched the leechCraft.
My newly appointed captain paces the command plank, arms crossed. My five-kilometer war vessel begins a roll, cycling through her banks of railguns as they hurl death into the face of the Sovereignโs fleet. Orion half turns to face me, smirking for all to see.
โNow, about carving that path,ย dominus.โ
She orders the engines to pound blackmatter. We shoot forward through the remains of two men-of-war.
My bridge is silent but for the buzz of technical orders. Missiles flash in concert beyond our hull. We deploy our flak screens, as the enemy has now deployed theirs, rendering missiles worthless. An aura of light surrounds us like a no-manโs-land. Railgun ordnance smashes into our hull, though we do not feel the reverberations here on the bridge. Our equipment does not spark. Wiring does not fall from overhead compartments. This ship is the pinnacle of seven hundred years of design.
Sevro nudges me. โWe might just gorywell make it.โ
The armada around us is massive. Beyond massive. It was brought here to make the gathered lords and all their fleets out past the Rubicon Beacons tremble, and still it is not half the combined fleet. But now that very armada quakes from the inside like a corpulent body as some alien chews its way out of the host.
We make our escape from the armada in quick fashion.
They do not pursue us past the Rubicon Beacons, where we are joined by our small fleet as well as those of the Cordovan, the Telemanuses, the Norvo. I hope more will flock to our banners after todayโs last surprise.
I examine our wakeโnaval detritus. Bodies of men and women float behind my vessel. They came out of cracked and punctured ships. Some are still alive but will soon freeze or suffocate. More dead in my path. How many will it take?
I leave Orion the bridge. Sevro and I find our way to the engineering bay, where we have Oranges cut us out of our mangled suits. We rush from there to the hangar, a vast metal depot scattered with ships, equipment, and now broken men. Yellows dart about aiding the wounded and carting them off to the medbay, Grays and Oranges helping carry.
Weed prods several unarmed Golds with his razor. Pebble and Harpy help the Yellows. My eyes search frantically for Mustang. I find her under one of the battered storkโs wings, speaking with her father. A long wound mangles her left arm. I donโt mention it. They were boarded by a leechCraft, and managed to shear the other off when entering the hangar.
โWeโve put the bulk of the Sovereignโs fleet behind us,โ I tell Augustus.
โWhere is Quinn?โ Sevro asks sharply. โDid they get her to the medBay yet?โ
Mustang does not answer. Instead, she looks to the ramp of the stork, where Roque descends, carrying Quinn in his arms. Sheโs pale. Long. And lifeless. Sevro does not move. Does not speak. His nostrils flare as a breath catches in his chest, a pitiful sob locked tight in the boy who never cries. He goes numb. Ghostlike. And I reach for him, but he pulls away not in anger, but in confusion, as though he was told the future once, and this reality is not what
was promised. He stumbles backward, away from her body, looking around, before turning and fleeing the hangar.
Roque walks past me with Quinn. His face is slack and tired. He wants to say something bitter, but he bites his tongue and just shakes his head at me. He still does not know why I attacked him in his room before the gala. And now this. Iโve never seen him so broken.
โLook at her,โ he tells me. โDarrow, look at your friend.โ
I look at Quinn and feel everything go quiet. Here she is, peaceful in death. Why can we not breathe life back into her? Why can we not simply restart the day? Do everything right. Save the ones we love.
Roque moves away with Quinn toward the hangarโs transparent pulse field, which opens into space. Heโs bent and broken as he walks to the stars to push his lost girl out among them.
I grab the tackal when I see him exit the stork, demanding to know what happened. She died, he tells me. Itโs just that. Heโs tired like the rest of us. He rolls down his sleeves. โI wonโt apologize. I did my best.โ
โOf course you did,โ I say, shaking myself. โOf course.โ
He asks me where my helmet cam is. I stare at him. โThe footage,โ he says. โDo you even understand what you just did?โ He waves around. โTwo men took one of the greatest vessels ever built. Golds will flock to our banners. All it takes is my media and your story.โ
I tell him, absently, almost forgetting the dataRecorder the Sons of Ares put in my tooth to record the bomb blast. Itโs activated with a clench of my molars. I clenched them as soon as I sat down in the Sovereignโs o ce. I reach inside my mouth and delicately pry it loose of the gums. It is smaller than a hair. The tackalโs eyes light up.
โWhere did you get this?โ he asks.
โBlack market,โ I say. โSovereign has damned herself. Use the recording. Make this war a fair fight.โ
I leave the tackal there and am about to leave the cleanup to others, when I notice the Oranges and lowColors watching me. I canโt simply lead with violence. So I join Pebble and Harpy and
lend my aid in helping the wounded to the medbay. The rest of the Howlers help too. And Mustang, and eventually even Victra.
After the last Gray is loaded on a gurney, I stand in the empty hangar. Augustus has gone to the bridge. The tackal avoids the Telemanuses who accompany him, and instead makes for the communications hub. Iโm left alone. Roque is gone. I donโt know what to do, where to go.
Blood and scorch marks stain the deck. I look at my hands. These are the consequences of my actions, and I feel so alone. I lean my head against the cold metal wall.
She comes from behind. I donโt think she says my name. Iโm not sure. I just smell her damp hair as her arms wrap around me. Squeezing tightly.
โI know youโre tired,โ Mustang says quietly. โBut Sevro needs you.โ
โWhat about Roque?โ I ask, turning to face her. So much lingers unsaid between us. So many questions unanswered. So many crimes left unforgiven. So much anger and perhaps still the faint flicker of something more. I feel it as she cups my neck, and lets the strength in her fingers lend itself to me.
โNot now,โ she says. Roque blames me. And he should. They all should blame me. And itโs only going to get worse.