When the newsanchors finally catch up, their spin attempts are laughable.
“Unsubstantiated leaks.”
“Unverified archives.”
“Possible disinformation campaign by radical elements.”
And then a mid-tier communications director makes a mistake.
She goes live with a statement and uses the phrase “emotional manipulation assets.”
She’s talking about Reapers.
But the phrasing lands like a slap.
By midnight, there’s fire on three spaceport tarmacs. By morning, half a dozen more whistleblowers have come forward. Not just about Reapers now. About everything. Surveillanceprotocols. Civilian experimentation. Class-based memory wipes. Stuff even I hadn’t imagined.
The narrative collapses in real time.
No script can keep up.
I’m offered interviews with every major network. Alliance-aligned and otherwise.
I take two.
One with an independent circuit.
One with a fringe-cast that broadcasts to colonies nobody talks about.
In both, I say the same thing.
“I’m not a victim. I’m not a symbol. I’m a woman who was marked as disposable and chose to survive anyway. That is not heroic. It is not exceptional. It is infuriatingly common.”
They try to get me to cry.
I don’t.
They try to get me to forgive.
I won’t.
Tur watches every interview. Doesn’t say much. But when I get home that night, he’s standing in the kitchen barefoot, frying synth-chilies in a battered pan, and he just murmurs, “You were flawless.”
I lean against the doorway, exhausted. “I was furious.”
He glances back. “That’s what I said.”
The Grill stays open.
People keep coming.
Not just to eat.
To talk.
To confess.
To plot.