Font Size:

That lands. His ego likes command.

He nods once, grudging. “Fine.”

I turn to Captain Jessa. “You run boarding teams.”

She grins, feral. “Gladly.”

I look at the tech ops lead—Mira, a woman with grease under her nails and eyes that look like she sleeps with one ear on a server rack. “You coordinate with Jordan’s known hack style.”

Mira blinks. “Her—hack style?”

I nod. “She leaves fingerprints. Patterns. She thinks like a systems engineer who grew up hiding in institutions. She’ll build backdoors, not brute force. You anticipate her moves so we can find her faster.”

Mira’s expression shifts—respect, interest. “Copy.”

I turn to med lead—Dr. Senn, a grizzled Vakutan with a scar down his snout. “Prep trauma bays.”

Senn nods once. “Expect burns. Restraint injuries. Malnutrition.”

My chest tightens. I keep it leashed.

“Also,” I add, “prepare for chemical exposure. Morazin likes gas.”

Renn’s voice is low. “Procurement’s already looking for ships. We can buy?—”

“No,” I say sharply. “We don’t buy from anyone tied to the Nine. We buy clean, or we buy stolen.”

A few faces brighten at the wordstolen. Criminals understand stolen.

Renn nods. “I’ve got options.”

I make my next choice—a strategic one over pride.

“Temporary contracts,” I say. “Non-Kaijen merc crews.”

The room stills again.

A captain frowns. “Boss, bringing outsiders?—”

“Gives us manpower without surrendering control,” I cut in. “We hire on my terms. Short leash. Clear payout. No access to our internal comms. If they betray us, they don’t leave Terranus V breathing.”

Renn studies me, then nods slowly. “That’ll work.”

Fyr mutters, “You’re really doing it.”

I glance at him. “Yeah.”

He swallows. “For her.”

I don’t answer that part out loud.

Because it’s true, and truth makes people reckless.

The cruiserwe buy is ugly in the way serious ships are ugly—no sleek curves meant for holo-ads, just armor plating, reinforced comm arrays, a prow designed to bite through debrisand keep going. Its hull smells like coolant and old metal and recently welded seams. The engine hum is deeper than the shuttle I stole from Gur, a steady predator purr.

We rename it in the bay, because names matter, and because superstition is just strategy wearing a costume.

Renn offers a few options. Jessa suggests something obscene.