Chapter 66 – Tenth Hour

Davídrius, what’s going on? I thought you said you killed her?

“I did,” the Velocitechnic growled as he glared at Siyuakén, who blankly stared back. “…I swear, by all rights she was dead. I fuckin’ sliced through her heart! This doesn’t… she can’t…!”

Kevérin glanced toward Davídrius uneasily before turning back to Morcii and Siyuakén. Based on appearances alone, Siyuakén seemed to be her normal living self — same fit body, same moderate height, same facial definition. Nearly every physical trait was the same. Yet the metallic rashes that wreathed her entire body just prior to her fleeing Nimalia had seemingly receded to her left arm and eye alone, and there were no signs of the damage Davídrius claimed to have caused. …Are you sure? the Pyrotechnic questioned, I don’t see anything that would indicate that you… er… killed her.

“Are you fuckin’ doubtin’ me?” The Velocitechnic’s brow furrowed in fury. “I ain’t lyin’ about this, and I know what I fuckin’ saw! Just go ask Rebehka before you assume shit! I’m tellin’ you, I killed Siyuakén, and this can’t be her!”

“We did just witness the Nanocreatures’ ability to shape-shift,” Krydonin pointed out. “She’s probably a look-alike; don’t let it get to you. He’s just stalling for time!”

The Commander quickly dived to the left as she flipped the stone under Morcii’s feet, signaling for the other nearby Black Suns Chaotics to engage as well. The Nanocreature leader proved unfazed by the attack, however, and simply crossed his arms as several large metallic beasts quickly formed from the growing masses of Nanocreature bugs and attacked the Black Suns, forcing their attention away.

He smirked. “CAN’T HAVE THE SHOW INTERRUPTED, NOW, CAN WE?”

“There’s no show. You’re clearly lyin’!” Davídrius countered stubbornly, “Krydonin’s right, this is just a double or somethin’. We should—!”

“NO NO, DON’T BE QUITE SO HASTY,” Morcii interjected. “YOU DO HAVE A POINT — SHE COULD INDEED BE A DOPPELGANGER. BUT, I WONDER, HOW COULD I KNOW YOUR FRIEND WELL ENOUGH TO FAKE THIS?”

AAGH!” Siyuakén suddenly clutched her head as she unceremoniously collapsed to her knees, her entire body tensing in pain. “Ah…! Agh… guh…”

“Wha—?!” The entirety of Hero Machina reeled back in surprise, each of them startled by the sudden display of emotion.

“Si… Siyuakén…?” Kaoné ventured warily, slowly extending her arm toward the corrupted Electrotechnic.

“…Wha…what…?” Siyuakén slowly looked up, her eyes widening as she spotted Kaoné. She then jerked her head toward Davídrius — and then Kevérin — and then Kievkenalis — before drawing back, her breath catching in her throat. “N-no, no… get, go, go away! Run! Don’t—! You’ll get corrupted, don’t, go—!”

Siyuakén! No, wait…! Kevérin responded uneasily, we can—! Calm down, we can…

“You can what?!” she shot back, her previous distress instantly transforming into ire. “Save me? From him? How? You can’t even— you can’t even kill me right, you can’t, you can’t fight Morcii, or me, not now, not—!” She suddenly broke down again, cupping her face in her hands as she stumbled backwards. “Go! Run! Please, don’t… don’t follow me!”

All that followed Siyuakén’s broken outburst was dead silence… silence that was shattered mere moments later by Morcii’s chuckling.

“PERHAPS NOW YOU ARE CONVINCED AS TO HER IDENTITY?”

“Tch!” Davídrius scowled and then blasted forward, stopping just in front of Siyuakén’s curled body moments before the sonic boom produced from his takeoff. Faster than anyone could track, he brought his blades down over Siyuakén’s head — and then stopped just short.

“What—?” Kaoné stared at him in surprise. “Davídrius, what…?”

Fuck! Fucking… fuck!” The Velocitechnic’s face scrounged up in frustrated fury. “I can’t— fuckin’ shit, I can’t do this again… fuck!”

“HOW AMUSINGLY PATHETIC,” Morcii remarked with a sneer. “YOU CAN’T EVEN BRING YOURSELF TO KILL HER, WHEN YOU’VE ALREADY DONE SO ONCE! AND YOU EXPECT TO STOP ME?”

“…You—!!” Davídrius turned his rage toward Morcii, but before he could act on it Vélunis had dashed up, driving his own blades toward Siyuakén’s head — and then both Velocitechnics were blown away by an intense blast of electrical power.

“I SEE NOT ALL OF YOU ARE SO CAUGHT UP IN YOUR EMOTIONS THAT YOU FORGET YOUR PRAGMATISM.” The Nanocreature leader chuckled again, watching Davídrius and Vélunis stumble back to their feet as Siyuakén casually returned to hers, all hints of her previous outbreak removed from her now-blank expression. “BUT YOUR INSISTENCE ON RESISTANCE IS ABSURD. THIS EPISODE IS A TESTAMENT TO YOUR INABILITY TO STOP ME OR MY FORCES — TO SAY NOTHING OF YOUR PREVIOUS ATTEMPTS AT ‘BATTLES’ WITH ME! YOU STILL BELIEVE YOU CAN STOP ME? YOU STILL BELIEVE YOU CAN SAVE YOUR GALAXY? AND ALL YOU HAVE TO SHOW FOR IT IS A CRUDELY RUDIMENTARY LEVEL OF KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE CHAOS AYAS, AND A REMARKABLE INABILITY TO FOLLOW THROUGH A SIMPLE MURDER? ASTOUNDING! THIS ENTIRE SITUATION IS ASTOUNDING! YOU CLAIM TO BE THE DESCENDANTS OF THE ALDREDAS, WHO THEMSELVES WERE BARELY ABLE TO FEND OFF BOTH I AND MY MASTERS? YOU SHOULD BE ASHAMED, IF ONLY YOU POSSESSED EVEN ONE IOTA OF THE AWARENESS YOU WOULD NEED TO BE SO!”

You sure do talk a lot, Kievkenalis observed, and we’ve at least been able to hold our own against you before. You can’t just dismiss us that easily.

“YOUR ATTEMPT AT BRAVADO IS AMUSING AT BEST, ALDREDANOID. WE BOTH KNOW THAT THE ONLY REASON YOU LIVE YET IS BECAUSE I ALLOW IT. IF I TRULY WISHED YOU DEAD, OR AMONG MY FORCES, THEN IT WOULD HAVE HAPPENED LONG AGO.”

“What?” Davídrius growled. “You’re sayin’ you want us alive? So you can, what, shove your superiority in our faces? Is that it? Need someone to flaunt your ego in front of so you feel validated?”

“VALIDATION? FROM THE LIKES OF YOU?” Morcii snorted in derision. “THE ONLY VALIDATION I REQUIRE IS FROM THE MORIKAI, BUT I CAN HARDLY DERIVE PRIDE FROM CONQUERING A GALAXY IN SUCH A PITIFUL STATE AS YOURS. AND IF I WERE TO CONQUER THE WHOLE GALAXY, THEN WHAT WOULD BE LEFT FOR THE MORIKAI? SURELY, YOU UNDERSTAND MY DILEMMA.”

“Oh, sure, definitely,” Vélunis drawled. “Man, I wish all of my dilemmas were about whether or not I should conquer the whole damn galaxy.”

“ENOUGH. I HAVE SPENT ENOUGH TIME TALKING.” Morcii turned away. “I’VE HAD MY FUN; ENJOY YOURSELVES, ALDREDANOIDS, FOR THE NEXT WE MEET I SHAN’T BE SO GRACIOUS AS TO ALLOW YOU TIME TO RESPOND—”

Overdrive: Speed Break!!

Instantly, Davídrius was on Morcii, his blades driven clear through the Nanocreature’s chest. He immediately followed with a fierce flip-kick, slamming his feet into Morcii’s head and smashing him to the ground. The Nanocreature leader quickly responded by extricating himself just in time to catch the Velocitechnic’s foot as he followed up with a roundhouse kick, forcing them to lock eyes momentarily.

“THAT BURST OF CHAOS ENERGY…” Morcii muttered, and then smirked. “SO YOU UNLOCKED YOUR OVERDRIVE, ALL FOR ME? I’M FLATTERED.”

“Not for you,” Davídrius muttered, “this ain’t for you.” He broke out of Morcii’s grasp, shattering the Nanocreature’s hand in the process before drop-kicking him across the battlefield. “This is for Siyuakén! And all the other poor bastards you think you can stomp all over!”

“YOU NEVER CEASE TO AMAZE—!” Morcii started, but was interrupted as the Velocitechnic appeared nearby and slammed his foot into the Nanocreature’s mouth, obliterating his chin. Recoiling, Morcii quickly reached to grab Davídrius by his throat only to be forced to dive to the side to avoid another kick; the Nanocreature leader immediately followed by leaping into the sky, ceasing his ascent several hundred meters above the battlefield to turn around, transform both of his arms into massive laser cannons, and then get smashed back ground-ward as Davídrius easily reached his height with a single bound and slammed his foot into the Nanocreature’s back.

Overdrive: Infinite Lift!” Wilkas shouted, just in time to intercept Morcii with a massive blow and send him careening through the air and into the mountain across the valley. Davídrius and Vélunis both immediately took off down the mountainside, using their superior speed and reflexes to reach the other side of the valley as Kevérin simply flew after them.

No…! Kievkenalis frowned as he squinted at the other mountain in frustration. I can’t get over there! How am I supposed to help—? Uaah?! Wilkas?! What are you doing?!

“You wanted to get to the other side, right?” The Forcetechnic replied as he easily hoisted Kievkenalis into the air and turned toward the valley. “Well, here you go!”

Wait, what, no—! Aaaahhhh!!

“…You can’t be serious.” Kaoné stared in disbelief as the Chaostechnic disappeared into the distance. “You really just threw him across the valley.”

“Don’t worry about it.” Wilkas waved her off, preparing to leap down the mountainside himself when a massive lightning bolt suddenly struck him from above, once again shutting down his armor. He immediately threw himself to the side to evade another strike before turning toward Siyuakén, who stared back blankly. “…Damn. Looks like we’re stuck with this bitch.”

“Wilkas—!”

“Look, I never knew her, aside from the fact that she blacked out Nimaliaka Central and trashed the Gateport.” The Forcetechnic clenched his fists repeatedly, stretching his fingers as he stared down the corrupted Nimalian. “All I know is that she’s in the way, and we need to get rid of her.”

“But…” Kaoné frowned as she threw Siyuakén an uneasy glance. “…But, she—”

“No buts!” Wilkas exclaimed, smashing his fists together before slamming his right fist into the ground, launching large rocks into the air that he punched to send them flying toward Siyuakén. “Now c’mon! Watch my back! And fix my armor already!”


Overdrive: Limitless Weaponswright!

Vélunis created a line of railguns in the air before pointing them at Morcii and unleashing a barrage of weapons fire, throwing up immense amounts of rock and debris. Davídrius disappeared into the cloud faster than anyone could track; the instant afterward Morcii was tumbling through the air before catching himself on a rock wall, using it to rocket himself back at the Velocitechnic. Davídrius quickly knocked the Nanocreature leader aside with his blades, allowing Kevérin to swoop in and bathe Morcii in flame — flames that the Nanocreature easily swept aside as he leaped into the air, smashing his head into Kevérin’s gut before grabbing his arm and launching him ground-ward, where he slammed into Kievkenalis just as the Chaostechnic approached and sent both Chaotics tumbling down the mountain.

Vélunis quickly followed by opening fire with the railguns again, blasting Morcii with projectiles in an attempt to shoot him out of the air. The Nanocreature leader took the first volley directly but whipped around and snatched several bullets out of the second volley, launching them back at Vélunis before diving down to the ground to repair himself with a handful of approaching Nanocreature ground units. Davídrius immediately moved to intercept him, managing to kick several of the units down the mountain before they reached Morcii, but he failed to prevent the Nanocreature leader from completely healing his wounds. Morcii then turned his attention to the Velocitechnic, lunging forward to engage in close-quarters combat at a far higher speed than any non-Velocitechnic could track.

They’re… too fast… Kievkenalis muttered as he watched the battle in front of him and Kevérin uneasily.

Even with the Chaos State, we can’t match that… Kevérin scowled. Damn it, not again! Can’t the Ayas ever help us at all?!

The two Chaotics were then forced to duck as Davídrius was sent flying over their heads and tumbling down the mountainside. Morcii vaulted over the two as well, offering them a fleeting glance before spinning around midair to counter several javelins Vélunis had launched at Mach speeds. Davídrius quickly took advantage of the opening to dash back up to Morcii’s side and dropkick him down the mountain before taking off and intercepting the Nanocreature leader to bicycle kick him into the air. Vélunis instantly open fired with his railguns again, ripping off Morcii’s left arm and leg as he dashed down the mountain himself, crafting a dozen swords in a ring around himself before launching them upwards at the Nanocreature. Morcii immediately moved to counter the attack, transforming his severed limbs into disembodied hands that he used to catch two of the blades and then deflect the rest. The Nanocreature leader then threw the blades at his opponents — one toward Vélunis and one toward Davídrius — just as he transformed his hands into laser cannons and opened fire. Vélunis dived out of the way, but Davídrius simply tanked the blast with his armor as he leaped into the air and spiked Morcii with his heel, instantly slamming the Nanocreature to the ground. Morcii quickly jumped back to his feet but was suddenly blown sideways as Vélunis rammed into him; Davídrius immediately intercepted Morcii with another kick, launching him across the mountainside where Vélunis jumped in front of him and blasted him with his railguns yet again, following up with a hard kick that knocked Morcii back into the air. Davídrius jumped up after the Nanocreature, swinging his foot down hard to spike him again — only to have his kick stopped as Morcii grabbed him by his heel.

“THAT ATTACK MAY HAVE WORKED THE FIRST TIME,” he snarled, and then yanked his arm down, launching Davídrius toward the ground below. “BUT YOU’D BE A FOOL TO EXPECT IT TO WORK AGAIN!”

The Nanocreature leader dived into the ground, barely missing Davídrius as the Velocitechnic managed to jump out of the way. Vélunis quickly followed up with another railgun volley, but Morcii simply leaped out of the way before slamming his floating hands into the Formtechnic and then grasping him by his ankles and hoisting him into the air. Davídrius jumped in to try and sever the bonds but was intercepted by Morcii, who had replaced his severed left leg with his right arm — transformed into a left leg — and deftly blocked each of Davídrius’s blows with his feet alone before suddenly growing an arm out of his chest and punching the Velocitechnic in the face, sending him reeling back in surprise. Morcii then lifted his right leg into the air and brought it down over Davídrius’s head—

“Chaos SLAM!

Kievkenalis rocketed into Morcii, impacting the Nanocreature leader with an explosion of Chaos Energy and knocking him clear down the mountainside and into the crevice below.

“The fuck was that?!” Davídrius exclaimed, recovering from being knocked back himself.

That… that was a Movement-type ability, Kievkenalis muttered, dumbfounded. I… didn’t know I could do that. I shouldn’t be able to do that…

But you tried it anyways? Kevérin snorted as he approached and alighted next to the Chaostechnic.

I don’t know, it just popped into my head…

“Look, I’m glad for you and all, mate, but we’re still in the middle of a fight here,” Vélunis commented as he dropped to the ground after cutting himself free of the Nanocreature binds. “He’s stuck in the crevice, now would be a good time to get the drop on him.”

You’re right. Kevérin lifted into the air again, his flame jets melting the rock underfoot. I’ll sweep the crevice with fire and then we’ll jump in and catch him by surprise! He blasted away from the mountain before stopping his flame jets and allowing himself to fall toward the crevice as the other three Chaotics quickly jumped down the mountainside themselves. Within seconds, Kevérin found himself just above the lip of the crevice — immediately, he re-engaged his flame jets and then filled the entire crevice with flame, covering the rocks and lighting up the darkness as if hell itself had appeared. He maintained the heat bath for several seconds before snapping the fires out of existence; Kievkenalis followed up with a quick call of “Chaos Assist” before the four Chaotics jumped down into the crevice, Kevérin lighting up their path with his flames.

“Ungh—!” Davídrius grunted upon landfall. “This crevice is deeper than I thought.”

Is this a major fault line or something?… Kievkenalis questioned as he stared upward at the thin sliver of light that was the crevice opening. How is it so deep?

“And so dark…” Vélunis scowled as he crafted a rifle with a flashlight attachment and used it to look around. “Let’s hurry up and finish off Morcii. I’m already having second thoughts about coming down here.”

“AS YOU SHOULD! THOUGH YOUR FORESIGHT COMES A LITTLE TOO LATE.”

What?! Kevérin exclaimed as the light above them disappeared with the sound of metal hatches slamming shut. The Pyrotechnic immediately bathed the entire area around the Chaotics in flame again, illuminating the dark crevice for meters around — and revealing Morcii’s levitating form.

“TO THINK, THAT YOU ACTUALLY FOLLOWED ME INTO AN ENCLOSED UNDERGROUND AREA…” The Nanocreature leader laughed to himself. “YOUR LACK OF FORESIGHT IS APPALLING.”

“We can still fight you here, easily,” Davídrius shot back. “Hell, easier than up above, even. There’s nowhere for us to go, sure, but there’s nowhere for you to go, either!”

“NOWHERE FOR ME TO GO?” Morcii echoed, and then grinned viciously. “YOU SEEM TO BE UNDER THE IMPRESSION THAT YOU HAVE TRAPPED ME HERE. BUT IN REALITY…” He paused momentarily as a deafening cracking noise reverberated through the crevice. “…I’M THE ONE WHO TRAPPED YOU.”

“Tch!” Davídrius scowled and then leaped at the Nanocreature leader, but before he had cleared even half the distance a rock column exploded out of the wall beside him and slammed him into the opposite wall.

“AGAIN, YOU UNDERESTIMATE THE NANOCREATURES!” Morcii exclaimed, “YOU UNDERESTIMATE MY ABILITIES, AND YOU UNDERESTIMATE MY CONTROL! YOU LEAVE ME NO CHOICE BUT TO CLAIM YOU FOR MYSELF, QUAKEBORN, EVEN IF I MUST BEAT THE AYAS OUT OF YOU FIRST!”

“Chaos Deflect!” Kievkenalis called out just in time to knock away a large boulder that almost crushed the Chaotics. He then glanced around at the rock walls as they began to tremble violently, shaking loose smaller rocks and dust that cascaded down to the crevice floor. Guys, we need to get out of here—!

“THERE IS NO ESCAPE, ALDREDANOIDS!” The Nanocreature leader slowly rose higher and higher into the air as more and larger stones began falling to the ground, forcing the Chaotics to direct all of their attention to avoid being crushed. “LIE BURIED WITH YOUR HUBRIS, TRAPPED UNDER YOUR FOOLISHNESS! FOR NOW…” He glared down as the rock walls on either side of him completely shattered and caved in. “…YOU ALL BELONG TO ME!

Chapter 65 – False Known: Undeath

1 Day Later

“Oi, oi! Kevérin!”

“Huh?” The Pyrotechnic stopped in his tracks momentarily to turn around, spotting Davídrius as the Velocitechnic briskly approached from down the hall. Kevérin then turned back around and resumed walking at his previous pace, allowing Davídrius to catch up and fall into place beside him. “What is it?”

“Have you looked at this place?” Davídrius scowled as he glanced around the dark hallway they were walking through. “Are we supposed to fight Morcii here?”

“That’s the plan.”

“Well it’s a terrible plan! Ain’t it fuckin’ basic battle tactics that mountains make terrible battlegrounds?!”

“We have Chaotics like Kaoné on our side, and there’s a couple of Geotechnics amongst Krydonin’s forces. We can use the terrain to our advantage, not to mention it’ll be difficult for any of the Nanocreature ships to land nearby before the base’s anti-air weapons blow them to bits.”

“You’re implyin’ that our tech can stand up to the Nanocreatures, or that we’ll even have time to react. What if Morcii pulls that planetfall bullshit he did back on Oriciid’kas and just obliterate half the base on impact? What then?”

“He can’t get the drop on us like that, though. The Genesis is keeping explicit look out for him, so we’ll have advance warning. He may be fast, but his movement speed is far from instantaneous.”

“Advance warnin’,” Davídrius scoffed as the two Chaotics rounded a corner into a far more spacious walkway. The wall to their left slanted inward and hosted several long windows, allowing a grand view of the mountainside, neighboring crevice, and the mountains beyond. “By ‘advance warnin’, do you mean we’ll have three seconds to react instead of just two?”

“Quit complaining,” Kevérin retorted, absentmindedly patting the pouch slung over his armor that held the Ayas Tanivas as he and Davídrius stopped at a window to take in their surroundings. “The Nanocreatures are in the system and they could approach this planet at any time. We’re already committed, so we have no choice but to stand our ground.”

“Famous last words…”

“Shut up.”

“Anyways—”

A bright dot suddenly appeared in the sky, cutting the Velocitechnic off and drawing his attention. It briefly outshone the sun itself before fading away as quickly as it had appeared.

“What the—?!” Davídrius exclaimed, “the fuck was that?!”

“That was the Drive bomb going off,” Kevérin responded, his attention adjusting from the sky outside to his glasses’ information feed. “Well, the bomb actually went off a while ago, but light doesn’t travel instantaneously, you know.”

“Drive bomb? You mean that Subspace Drive rig the Earthians were talkin’ about yesterday? I thought we were usin’ it against the Nanocreatures, but there’s no fleets around this planet…”

“It was used against the Nanocreature fleets. The ones fighting above Gu’Dan, in fact.”

“What?! And we saw it from here?!”

“Yep…” Kevérin responded warily. “And we’ll know just how effective it was right about… now.”

“Huh?”

“The damage data is coming in now, is what I meant. It looks like the Drive bomb was surprisingly effective, actually; they wiped out nearly four thousand Nanocreature ships with that one bomb. That’s pretty damn impressive—!?”

The two Chaotics were interrupted again by another flash of light, this one significantly brighter and longer in duration than the one previous; Davídrius and Kevérin both reflexively winced and looked away due to the pure intensity alone.

“Was that another Drive bomb?” Davídrius scowled. “Shit, I feel sorry for any of the poor schmucks stuck in the space battle.”

“No… that can’t be right,” Kevérin responded slowly, “we… the CSA only had one Drive, so there was only one bomb. The Genesis only brought one prototype Drive for the CSA, there’s no way they had another. This one was…”

“…Was what?” Davídrius prompted uneasily after the Transfer Captain paused for several moments.

“…It was the Nanocreatures. They used their own Drive bomb in retaliation. Except they wiped out twenty thousand of our ships — one of which was the Siion Deathnought! — and also obliterated a fourth of Gu’Dan.”

“They… what?”

“They obliterated the local Fortress World. Took a whole chunk out of it…”

Davídrius stared at the Pyrotechnic uneasily as he continued reading the data feed on his glasses. “…You’re kiddin’. Right? This is just a really, really bad joke. Right?”

“I wish it was…”

“So the Nanocreatures can destroy whole fuckin’ planets, then, huh? Well why the fuck don’t they just do that, then? Are they fuckin’ toyin’ with us? Is that it?”

“…Suddenly, this plan to lure Morcii to an isolated planet is making a lot less sense…”

“Oh, now you say that!”

“Well, there’s no time to change our minds now.” Kevérin pointed up at the sky again just as klaxons began blaring in the hallway and several anti-air batteries built into the mountainside began firing. “Looks like the Nanocreatures are here.”

“’Course they are.”

“C’mon.” Kevérin gestured for Davídrius to follow as he began walking down the hallway again at a brisk pace. “Let’s join the defense. It’s only a matter of time now before our help is needed.”


Chaos BLAST!

Kaoné and Krydonin burst out of one of the mountain base’s airlocks just after Kievkenalis leveled a nearby cliff, obliterating a Nanocreature landing ship. He immediately shouted “Chaos Assist” before diving out of the way as Kaoné raised several spikes high into the air, piercing several more Nanocreature ships. Many of the ships immediately broke apart into several pieces that quickly reformed themselves into four-legged monsters, but before any of them could reach the ground, Krydonin telekinetically slammed them with stones, knocking them down the mountainside.

“They’re breaking through the air defenses already?” Wilkas scowled, observing the fighting below as he stopped just short of the edge of the base’s roof.

“They sure can beat our tech easily enough,” Vélunis remarked, creating a sniper rifle and using it to watch the ongoing ground-side battle before quickly moving his sights to Nanocreature units and opening fire. “But against Chaotics they lose, huh? …What’re you still sittin’ on your ass for, Wilkas? Get out there!”

“Thanks for asking nicely!” Wilkas shot back, but nonetheless joined the battle by leaping off of the roof, spinning halfway around midair and slamming his fist into the ground, shattering the rock for meters around.

“Try not to get carried away!” Krydonin ordered over the comms, “cause the mountainside too much damage and we’ll bring the whole thing down on top of us—!?”

No sooner had the words left her mouth, the entire forward wing of the base gave a loud metallic groan, filling the valley with a deafening echo. Kaoné immediately jumped away from the Nanocreatures she was confronting and turned toward the base, using her Materiatechnism to fix the foundation and support the surrounding terrain. “…This takes a lot of effort!” she shouted as she looked back at a handful of approaching metallic monsters. “Someone… cover me!”

Immediately a burst of fire swept over the terrain, cleanly fusing the Nanocreatures to the ground before Davídrius appeared in front of them and punted them down the mountainside. He gave Kevérin a quick nod before sprinting off to assist a small group of Black Suns Chaotics farther away. Kevérin then glanced back to Kaoné, giving her an all clear signal before muttering “Overdrive: Unrelenting Flame,” and rushing off on his own.

Chaos Charge,” Kievkenalis muttered, jumping back just as a Black Suns Electrotechnic fried the area in front of him with a single lightning strike. He then whipped around on his heel, firing several Chaos Strikes at approaching Nanocreatures before calling out “Chaos Armor,” thereby encasing his body in thick shields of Chaos Energy. Immediately afterward he fired a Chaos Cannon shot to his left just as Wilkas barged onto the scene with his fist out, impacting the Cannon projectile at just the right time to send it careening down the valley and into the crevice below, triggering a rock slide that crushed several Nanocreature bug swarms. The two Chaotics offered each other only a brief nod of acknowledgment before Wilkas charged forward again, smashing through the Nanocreatures in front of him just as Kevérin swept the ground behind him with flames, allowing Kievkenalis to disengage and run off to another area of the battlefield.

“Ha ha!” Davídrius whooped as he flipped through the air, slicing through several Nanocreatures below him with his outstretched blades. He landed on the ground with a roll before leaping back to his feet and dashing forward, weaving through hard light beams from a nearby Black Suns Solartechnic as he diced the smaller Nanocreature units with ease. After making some distance from the Solartechnic, he leaped into the air again, flipping once before driving his blades into two more Nanocreatures that were sitting on top of a large boulder. He immediately flipped away, but stumbled as his blades caught in the stone, sending him tumbling to the ground… just as the four-meter object began moving on its own.

“What the—?!” The Velocitechnic scowled, rolling backwards and jumping a short distance into the air just as a long appendage shot out from the stone’s base and swiped under his feet. Several more appendages began appearing as the stone spun around, forcing Davídrius to duck and roll away again to dodge — and subsequently get slammed over the cliff side from a third appendage that he had failed to spot. Before he had much time to fall, though, an invisible force grabbed his legs and threw him back on land.

“Don’t get carried away!” Krydonin barked as she alighted on the ground next to Davídrius. The Velocitechnic barely had time to acknowledge her before Vélunis appeared on the other side of him, haphazardly crafted two blades out of thin air, dumped them in Davídrius’s lap, and then gestured forward.

“The hell is that?” he questioned tensely, hastily creating a crude laser cannon as the large stone that had attacked Davídrius finally morphed into a fully autonomous six-legged creature. “…It was a Nano-whatsit too?”

The answer to Vélunis’s question came as the creature charged, firing several projectiles out of its insect-like mouth that all morphed into smaller metallic bugs midair. Davídrius immediately prepared to cut them all down but Vélunis responded faster, firing his laser cannon at the large creature before throwing it aside and creating three javelins in his hand — which Krydonin immediately snatched up with her telekinesis and used to spear the incoming Nanocreatures and then toss them aside. Davídrius dashed forward to catch the discarded weapons and then rammed them into the front legs of the large Nanocreature, but was immediately forced to dive to the side as the bug lunged forward. It quickly followed by developing two plasma cannons on its back and firing at Vélunis and Krydonin, hitting them both dead-on and flinging them backwards. Davídrius jumped back to his feet and back flipped onto the creature, slicing off its cannons in the process — but the moment his foot landed on the bug’s back, the creature transformed the entire surface into a giant springboard and flung the Velocitechnic high into the air. Krydonin quickly moved to catch him as Vélunis spun around, crafting two more laser cannons and firing repeatedly at the Nanocreature. The weapons fire blew off three of its legs, but all of the debris flung away from the Nanocreature suddenly froze midair and reversed direction, zooming through the air toward Vélunis as they transformed into a variety of sharp objects.

Overdrive: Invisible Hand.

Each of the flying knives was suddenly stopped by a similarly-sized stone leaping up from the ground below. Krydonin casually stepped forward, reaching out with her left hand and then clenching it, causing all of the frozen material — Nanocreature and stone alike — to quickly coalesce into a large sphere. The Manipulator Psychotechnic then flung the sphere at the creature as it charged forward; the sphere simply rebounded off of its metallic body, but Krydonin immediately followed by swiftly raising both of her arms, causing a large pillar of stone to suddenly rise and impale the creature from below. Without even pausing to check the status of the large bug, she pumped her right fist and then thrust it forward, manifesting in a large invisible force impacting the creature from the front and throwing it off of the cliff behind it, impaling spike and all. But before it disappeared from view, the Commander swept her left hand from below, causing a large hand of stone to catch the Nanocreature, slam it back onto land, and then clutch it tightly in a fist. With her right hand, Krydonin lifted the trapped creature higher into the air before cracking her knuckles and positioning her hands palms-out and fingers-forward, as if trying to separate two large objects. She paused for a moment, taking a deep breath… and then yanked her hands apart, causing the floating stone hand and creature to tear itself asunder. With a single final sweep of her arms, all of the debris was covered by a solid layer of stone, leaving little sign of any battle at all aside from a suspiciously smooth mountainside.

Davídrius whistled in admiration. “Well that was an impressive show.”

“I’m not a Commander for nothing,” Krydonin replied casually as she slowly scanned the battlefield beyond their immediately vicinity.

“Was all that hand-waving really necessary, though?” Vélunis questioned, “sure, I’m grateful for the save, but it seemed like you were just showing off.”

“As… grandiose as it may appear, it does help visualize the movement of force,” she responded as she turned back to face the two Nimalian Chaotics. “Ask any Psychotechnic and they’d say the same. Even then, though, it’s a function of my Overdrive.”

“WHICH IS QUITE LAUGHABLE, I MUST SAY. REQUIRING EXTRA STIMULI JUST TO MANAGE YOUR POWERS? PATHETIC!”

“What?!” Davídrius and Vélunis immediately backed into defensive stances and then jumped away as Morcii alighted on the ground not even a meter behind them.

“You’re… Morcii?” Krydonin glared at the Nanocreature leader, but cautiously backed away all the same as she noticed the tense expressions on the Nimalians’ faces.

“HMM, IT WOULD SEEM AS THOUGH THE ENTIRE GALAXY TRULY DOES RECOGNIZE MY FACE.” Morcii chuckled, and then slipped into a musing tone. “I SUPPOSE I SHOULDN’T BE SURPRISED, GIVEN THAT I ADDRESSED THE ENTIRE GALAXY WITH A VIDEO MESSAGE NOT LONG AFTER MY INITIAL ASSAULT…”

Chaos State: First Tier!

Kevérin and Kievkenalis both lunged forward, each using their Ayas to enter the Chaos State before attacking with flames and Chaos Energy from clear across the battlefield in an attempt to land a preemptive strike on Morcii. In the same instant, Davídrius and Vélunis lunged forward, hands occupied with blades as they moved to stab the Nanocreature leader while his attention was directed elsewhere — but before they could get within even half a meter of Morcii, the atmosphere all around them suddenly charged with immense amounts of energy, followed immediately by lightning strikes littering the battlefield, striking every Black Suns and Nimalian Chaotic and completely overloading their Armors.

“The hell—?!” Vélunis grunted, the weight of his now-powerless armor bringing him to his knees. Every other Chaotic on the battlefield moved similarly, save for Wilkas, who resisted the weight through pure strength; Kevérin and Kievkenalis, who resisted through the Chaos State; and Kaoné, who had nigh-immediately repaired her armor with but a thought and quickly moved to repair everyone else’s.

“…So we learn of new powers every day, huh?” Davídrius smirked tensely as he slowly climbed back to his feet. “You’re an Electrotechnic, too?”

“NO…” Morcii shook his head. “I AM INCAPABLE OF INTERFACING WITH CHAOS ENERGY IN THE SAME MANNER AS YOU ALDREDANOIDS. IF I WISH TO POSSESS A CERTAIN POWER, THEN I MUST… ENLIST AN INDIVIDUAL WHO POSSESSES IT.”

“…So, those lightning strikes…” Kaoné responded warily, “…those weren’t… you?”

“Ahahaha! No… no, they weren’t.” Morcii smiled viciously. “Perhaps you’d like to meet your attacker, though, hmm?”

As soon as the words left his mouth, the ground beside him exploded from an impact from above, flinging stone and debris everywhere and obscuring the shape of the new object. As the dust began to clear, its shape and attributes became more apparent: Aldredanoid, pale skin, maroon waist-cloak, gray pants, navy blue fitted chest plate, shoulder-length black hair, metallic rash-like marks alongside the left side of her face and down her left arm…

“Allow me to introduce my new lieutenant.” Morcii chuckled as he placed a hand on the woman’s shoulder. “I’m sure you all know her very well.”

“You’re shittin’ me…” Davídrius’s smirk contorted into a scowl of confusion and anger. “You’re… no. You can’t be… Siyuakén?”

Chapter 64 – Plans for Loss

2 Days Later

Isdia, Skydiath 25, 8034 –

“Exiting Subspace in three… two… one…”

Chief Captain Krick nodded wearily as he watched the gray-scale gradient outside the bridge window dissolve and give way to the deep black of true space. He quickly glanced toward one of the informational bridge displays before leaning forward in his commander’s chair, taking a deep breath, and then snapping his attention to the terra planet below.

“Determine our orbital coordinates,” he ordered, “locate the primary space station immediately and get us within docking request range.”

“Primary station located! Docking radius: two hundred kilometers. Station distance: sixty-three thousand kilometers. Station orbit: geosynchronous.”

“Get us there immediately, maximum safe speed. Contact the station and request an express docking queue, System General clearance; we don’t have time to wait.”

“Yes sir, maximum safe speed!”

“Contacting station to request express docking queue!”

“Good, good…” Krick nodded absentmindedly. “In the meantime, request boarding clearance for all leave parties. The moment we have clearance and locations, begin beaming the leave parties to the station, starting with Captain Bourne and the Nimalian Chaotics.”

“Yes sir! Requesting boarding clearance!”

“…I suppose this is it,” the Earthian Captain muttered to himself, “Tau’cen Kii, the second most important planet in the CSA, behind Oriciid’kas. Here’s hoping we can actually defend it…”


4 Hours Later

“This is one hell of a shore leave.”

“I don’t know if I’d call this leave.” Kievkenalis frowned as he looked around, taking in the station environment around him. The space station as a whole was a massive construct, over fifty kilometers across in every dimension, but Kievkenalis was currently seated around a small table along with Vélunis and Wilkas in a small, vacant cafe. Minimalism and the color of steel gray dominated the walls and decor of the cafe, with the exception of a holographic display that spanned the entirety of one of the side walls. On the display was a clear view of the terra planet of Tau’cen Kii below, as seen through the station’s external cameras. Its blue waters, green lands, and white clouds gave a rather serene impression of a planet soon to be plunged into war.

“Yeah, I have to agree with Kevken,” Vélunis remarked, drawing Kievkenalis’ attention back to his friends. “Just because we get to ‘explore the station’ doesn’t mean it’s shore leave. Hell, we have to remain in uniform and on standby. If you call that leave, then I feel sorry for you.”

“What’s even the point of us being on standby?” Wilkas sulked, turning toward the holographic display of Tau’cen Kii. “What’re we going to do when the system gets attacked? Throw on atmosphereless armor and attack spaceships hundreds of times our size?”

“Just because we can’t do anything on the space front doesn’t mean we can’t do anything at all,” Kievkenalis countered. “We can do the same thing we did back on Siionkagh.”

“Because we certainly helped a lot there.”

“But that’s the point, isn’t it?” The Chaostechnic glanced between Vélunis and Wilkas expectantly. “The whole reason we’re here is to try and come up with a defense plan that actually works, and to do that we need to build on experience. Our experience.”

“Oh, so that’s why we were invited to the strategy meeting that you’re talking about,” Vélunis drawled. “Oh wait! We weren’t.”

“The meeting is with the System General,” Kievkenalis admitted, “I guess it’s a little much to hope that we’d have a meeting with someone of such high rank.”

“Which is exactly why we submitted briefs instead,” Vélunis pointed out. “It’s also why we shouldn’t have to remain on standby. Even if the Nanocreatures attacked right now it’d still be several hours, maybe even days before we were deployed. It’s stupid. Why the hell can’t we just be on leave?”

Wilkas frowned in confusion. “What? You were just arguing against leave.”

“I was arguing against calling it leave, not against being on leave.”

“You were never one for pedantry,” Kievkenalis remarked.

Vélunis snorted. “Yeah, well I was never one for counting on mystical artifacts to defend entire systems on my own against the fucking apocalypse either, yet here I am.”

“Mystical artifacts?… Wait, the Ayas are actually important!”

“That’s what everyone says, but I’ve yet to see them do anything useful. They sure didn’t do shit against Morcii back in the Oriciid’kas system.”

“That’s different…”

“It doesn’t matter if it’s different, what matters is that the Ayas aren’t helping at all,” Vélunis countered. “…Really, Kevken? You’re doing the same thing every Chaostechnic ever has done. Just because the Ayas are Chaos Energy generators or some shit doesn’t make them this super-powerful end-all-be-all of Chaotic existence.”

“Yeah, gotta agree with Vélunis on this one.”

“Wait, Davídrius—?” Kievkenalis spun around in surprise, stopping to face the aforementioned Velocitechnic as he approached the three sitting Chaotics with Kaoné in tow.

“Yo.” Davídrius smirked and casually raised his hand in greeting.

“Where did—? …How did you find us?”

“Through your glasses.” Kaoné gestured toward Vélunis and Wilkas. “Since we’re all in Hero Machina, we can track each other.”

“Wait, but doesn’t that give an alert to the person being tracked?”

“It does.”

“What?” Kievkenalis whipped around to face Vélunis and Wilkas. “Why didn’t either of you say anything?”

Vélunis shrugged. “I don’t get why it’s so important.”

“We haven’t seen them—!” The Chaostechnic turned back to Kaoné and Davídrius. “We haven’t seen or heard from you since before you left for Oriciid’kas days ago! Since the Gate was compromised, and Morcii attacked the polar generator, I thought…”

Davídrius snorted. “Thought we were dead?”

“Well… it had crossed my mind, yes. How did you escape the planet, then? And manage to beat us here, too?”

“Davídrius here thought it would be a good idea to try out ‘Subspatial Storage.’” Kaoné threw the Velocitechnic a disapproving glance.

“What, was savin’ your life a bad idea?” he retorted.

“No, but what if it hadn’t worked? What if you could never figure out how to retrieve stuff that you stored?”

“Well, I did, so it’s a moot point.”

“But what if—!”

“Oi, enough with the ‘what if’s, you sound just like Kevérin.”

Kaoné stopped with her mouth half open before clamping it shut and crossing her arms irately. “You should still be more careful.”

“What’s this ‘Subspatial Storage’ that you’re talking about?” Wilkas spoke up.

“According to Arcán — uh, the Prior we have — uh…” Kievkenalis trailed off when he realized neither Vélunis nor Wilkas seemed to be following him. “…Alright, so it’s basically an ability that the Ayas Weapons have. They can, well, store things in Subspace, apparently.” The Chaostechnic then turned back to face Davídrius. “How do you even trigger it? And how’d you figure out how to pull stuff back out?”

“Whaddya mean, how do you trigger it? You just think ‘I wanna store that shit,’ and then it works.” Davídrius shrugged. “It ain’t that hard. Pullin’ shit out ain’t hard either, you just think it. ‘I want that thing back’ and then you swing the weapon and hey, look, your shit’s back. Simple.”

“You still had to ask Arcán about it,” Kaoné interjected.

“Look, I said simple, not intuitive.”

“That still doesn’t explain how you got off of Oriciid’kas,” Kievkenalis pointed out.

“It was pretty simple after that,” Davídrius replied. “I stored Kaoné and Kevérin and then ran for the Gate, and managed to dial out immediately after the previous connection timed out. I guess the Nanocreatures don’t have any Velocitechnics on their side to dial Gates, heh. Well from there I went back to Nimalia, asked Arcán how to unstore shit and how to drop out of the Chaos State, and then Nikéyin sent us straight to Tau’cen Kii with the Ayas ‘cause of a defense meeting or some shit. Which was pretty pointless ‘cause Kevérin’s the only one actually goin’ to the meeting…”

“What’d you have to use the Chaos State for?” Vélunis questioned, “did you try fighting Morcii head-on, too?”

Kaoné’s eyes widened in worry. “You fought him?”

“Yeah, but he ran off after a while…” Kievkenalis responded with an uneasy frown. “He said something about a surprise at Tau’cen Kii…”

Davídrius scowled. “This guy’s power is all over the place! He’s powerful enough to break through planetary shields, but he runs away from a bunch of Chaotics?”

“Oh, he didn’t run because we chased him off, believe me,” Kievkenalis quickly added. “I was even using the Chaos State and he was still holding his own against us. Easily.”

“…Do the Ayas really mean anything against this guy?”

“That’s what I said,” Vélunis interjected.

“He’s explicitly looking for them, so they must be important, somehow…” Kievkenalis sighed. “But what about Subspatial Storage? Did you try that against Morcii?”

Davídrius shook his head. “Didn’t work. Just like everythin’ else. I knew it sounded too convenient to start with, anyways.”

“You know, if you think about it,” Kaoné commented, “it almost seems like all of Morcii’s traits are meant to explicitly counter all of our options…”

“…There has to be something we can do,” Kievkenalis responded warily after several moments of silence, “…right?”

“Well, that’s what we’re here to find out, innit?” Davídrius shrugged. “Ain’t much else we can do right now, I guess. Just hope that the CSA can actually figure somethin’ out…”


“…Ah, Transfer Captain Tyrion, I presume? From the Nimalian ‘Hero Machina’ Chaotic squad?”

“Uh— yes, sir! I apologize for my tardiness!”

“Apology accepted. But we don’t have time for pleasantries; take a seat so we can get started.”

Kevérin saluted stiffly before turning toward the arc-shaped table in the middle of the conference room. Sitting on the side closest to the room’s entrance were Chief Captain Krick and another Earthian that Kevérin recognized as the researcher he had met on the Earthian Colony of Sunova — as the Pyrotechnic stepped past the bearded man, his glasses conveniently reminded him that the researcher’s name was Scott MacTavish. Three seats down from Scott sat Black Suns Commander Sinstis Krydonin, the officer who had accompanied Hero Machina during their brief excursion to the Black Suns world of Rossindon. She offered Kevérin a curt nod of acknowledgment as he sat down directly in between her and the Earthians. He then glanced toward the other end of the table where a tan-skinned Siion woman stood, her double-kneed legs bent down so far that she looked to be sitting anyways. She wore a black and maroon uniform with a number of gold and silver decals along her upper chest and shoulders, and her short, silver hair exposed an angular, hardened face, which seemed to be entirely focused on her glasses. Kevérin stiffened when his own glasses informed him that she was none other than Trissom Ukinon, the System Admiral in charge of all of the space fleets in the Tau’cen Kii system. He then glanced back at the large, dark-skinned Dra’kis man who had greeted him upon entering the room. He wore a uniform in a similar style to that of Ukinon’s, but navy blue instead of maroon. His long, black hair was tied back into three ponytails, and his face was completely void of hair (aside from his thin eyebrows) or imperfections. On first glance, he looked much like a young adult fashion model, but Kevérin stiffened even further with unease when he realized that the large man was actually Gin’zin Frath, the System General in command of all military forces in the Tau’cen Kii system — one of the highest and most important positions in all of CSA space.

Hearing that I was going to meet with them was one thing the Pyrotechnic thought to himself uneasily, actually seeing them in person, though

“I’m sure greetings are unnecessary given the situation,” Frath spoke up after ensuring that the room’s entrance was locked shut. He then stepped up to the front of the room, tapping the wall once to dim the lights and display a hologram of the Tau’cen Kii solar system before turning to face everyone else. “So allow me to get to the point: we. Need. A plan. Reports from the Oriciid’kas system are… discouraging, at best, and if I’m given to understand the level of technology of the Nanocreatures correctly, they might arrive in this system at any moment. It is clear, from Oriciid’kas, that attempting to simply overwhelm the enemy with numbers is not a valid solution, nor is engaging them in space combat in any capacity. Any attempts at direct combat can only be viewed as a delay tactic, because effectively, that is all they are.”

“That said,” Ukinon spoke up, extending her legs into a proper standing posture and moving up to the display wall across from Frath. She tapped her glasses twice and then slid her finger down the display, creating a box that listed various numbers and data on the fleets in the system. “We do have a variety of ships and fleets at our disposal. Direct combat may only be a delay tactic, but we can delay the Nanocreatures for a hell of a long time.”

“Uh, I’m sorry,” Scott interrupted timidly, “I’m afraid that we Earthians don’t have AR technology, so…”

“…Right,” Ukinon responded slowly before glancing back at the display. “I’ll lay it out, then. We have twenty-five fleets stationed in this system; five Siion fleets, ten Citan fleets, three Dra’ks, and seven mixed. Together they represent over ninety thousand ships, with over ten thousand Dreadnoughts, close to nine thousand Carriers, and twenty Motherships sitting a system or two over. Additionally, the Citan Deathnought Abroshem is stationed around the local Fortress World of Gu’Dan, which is just a little farther away from the sun than Tau’cen Kii. Furthermore, the two Deathnoughts that were stationed in Oriciid’kas, the Dakonis Raath and the On’esstin, retreated to this system over a day ago via Transpace. So we have a total of three Deathnoughts in this system — I believe that’s the highest number in a single system since the United Drakkar Offensive nearly five hundred years ago.” She glanced back at the display and then to Frath. “In short, we have more than enough firepower to hold the system for quite some time.”

“Can you be sure of that?” Krick leaned back in his chair as he crossed his arms. “I don’t know if you read this in the Oriciid’kas reports, but Morcii’s capable of obliterating entire fleets within seconds.”

“Actually—”

“Hold that thought,” Frath interrupted Scott just as the researcher began to speak. The General then continued, “I recognize Morcii as a threat, and I have ideas on how to deal with him. But let us plan against his fleets first.”

Krick frowned. “I don’t think you can adequately plan against the fleets without accounting for Morcii.”

“Reports from the past several weeks indicate that Morcii rarely participates in the space engagements,” Ukinon commented, “and even if he does, we have counters here that weren’t present in any of the other systems we’ve fought the Nanocreatures in. Namely, your Battlecruiser’s technology.”

Scott nodded understandingly. “Ah, so that’s why I’m here.”

“I can agree that the Genesis is a very advanced ship, and surprisingly effective against the Nanocreatures to boot,” Krick responded, “but it’s still only one ship.” The Earthian Captain suddenly narrowed his eyes as he glanced between the two CSA commanders. “…Don’t tell me you mean to seize it and then tear it apart so you can claim its tech for yourself.”

“…I must admit, in the name of honesty, that the thought had crossed my mind,” Frath replied slowly, ignoring Krick’s glare as it deepened. “But as you say, it is only one ship — and the relevant technology, I believe, has already been gifted to us.”

“You mean the prototype Subspace Drive?” Scott questioned.

Ukinon nodded. “Yes. It’s an amazing transportation device to be sure, but it can also make for an amazing weapon, if weaponized properly.”

“…How do you plan to weaponize transportation technology?” Kevérin asked in confusion.

“No, no… that makes sense.” Scott stroked his beard in thought. “Hmm, you’re right. As I understand it, your current FTL tech inserts the ship into, er, a ‘shadow’ of our dimension, to put it shallowly, that’s cast by the presence of Chaos Energy itself. Which is why you can’t travel through Dead Space, and why the tech can’t be weaponized, because it’s a local effect. But our Subspace Drive… hmm…”

“…What’s different about our Drive?” Krick prodded the researcher after a second of silence.

“Oh, right. Right, our Subspace Drive works completely differently. It uses Subspace, as its name suggests. I’m still uncertain as to the properties of this ‘Subspace,’ but what I can tell you is how the Drive works — basically, it opens a window into Subspace, which the ship accelerates through. The acceleration boosts the ship to many, many times light-speed, and the ship is able to maintain that constant speed through Subspace until reaching its destination, where the Drive opens a window back to real space that the ship decelerates through, so that once it re-enters real space it is traveling below light-speed.”

“How can we turn that into a weapon?”

“Simple physics, really. If we were to spontaneously introduce an object traveling at speeds orders of magnitude higher than c into real space, then there would be a spectacular release of energy.”

“…I assume you know how to do this?” Krydonin glanced toward Ukinon warily.

“In theory,” the Siion replied, “given the researcher’s notes, the stability of the window the Drive creates can be modified, and the stability of the window is what determines how much it accelerates the ship. Attempting to actually modify the stability is still outside of our grasp, but if we were to rig the Drive in such a way that the window stabilizers fail on exiting Subspace, then we’ll have created a crude, yet highly effective weapon.”

“…Can we really do that?” Krick turned back to Scott.

“Maybe,” the researcher responded, “I’ll hafta look at the Drive more closely, but if it’s possible I can probably figure it out and then rig up the prototype.”

“So… a ‘Drive bomb,’ huh?” Kevérin mused, “…how big will the blast be, though? When will we use it?”

“It’ll be a pretty big blast,” Scott remarked, “I’ll hafta fine-tune it a bit to make sure the Drive doesn’t blow up the whole system, but—”

“Blow up the whole system? Is that actually possible? Is that risk worth it?!”

“Given the circumstances, anything is worth stopping the Nanocreatures,” Frath stated. “…That said, I’d rather not sacrifice the system all the same. This ‘Drive bomb’ is but one tactic we have considered against the Nanocreature fleets, and it is the only one relevant to any of you.”

“That can’t be all you called us here for,” Krick immediately countered. “What’s the deal?”

“You said it yourself earlier, Earthian: you have but one ship,” Frath replied slowly. “We do not plan for you to join the main fleets — that would be a waste of both your ship, and the Ayas you possess. You mentioned Morcii earlier, and now is the time to consider him again. He will be your primary target.”

“Um, excuse me for being blunt, but, uh…” Kevérin responded uneasily, “…have you read the reports concerning Morcii? What makes you think we could handle him any better now than before?”

“Planning, boy, it’s all about planning.” Frath tapped his forehead. “Among other things, we need to draw Morcii away from the fleets, and your ship has displayed a surprising ability to resist him.”

Krick snorted in disbelief. “He broke through Teraton-grade Planetary Shielding, twice. And both were reinforced by an Ayas at the time! I think those are more reliable data points than the anomaly of him failing to destroy the Genesis.”

“Not quite,” Scott refuted, “I had some time to look at the Oriciid’kas battle logs, and an important thing to note is that the shields didn’t fail until the generator had been destroyed.”

“…That is what happens when you destroy shield generators,” Kevérin deadpanned.

Scott shook his head. “No, you don’t understand. You’re forgettin’ that the shield generator is protected by its own shield. To reach the generator, you’d have to bypass the shields, usually by overloadin’ them. But Morcii didn’t do that — the shields didn’t fail until he destroyed the generator itself. The same seems to be the case with the ships he destroyed, or at least, of the ships that managed to transmit damage data before they were completely obliterated.”

“Are you saying that Morcii… what, phased through the shields?” Frath questioned.

“I believe so, yes.” Scott nodded firmly. “I also believe that the reason he failed to do the same with the Genesis lies in its structurally and technically different shielding system. …I can’t easily explain why, but it does fit with the trend of the Genesis being surprisingly effective against the Nanocreatures.”

“Which is exactly why I need you to deal with Morcii,” Frath asserted. “I have two plans — let us call them plan A, and plan B. A is simple, and uses your beaming technology to dispatch Morcii.”

“If you’re going to suggest we beam him into the sun, it won’t work,” Krick deadpanned. “The beaming systems don’t have that kind of range. They can only reach a couple hundred thousand kilometers, maybe, and that’s really pushing it.”

“No one said that you have to beam Morcii into the sun with a single action,” Ukinon countered. “Can you not, shall we say, ‘chain beam’ him? That is, beam him closer to the sun, all while your ship is moving toward the sun itself, and simply repeatedly beam him closer to the sun until he’s actually in it?”

“…Now that’s an idea I wish I had thought of earlier.” Krick smirked. “Though I wouldn’t be surprised at all if this plan backfired somehow. Hell, some Earthians figured out how to block our beaming sensors, so I wouldn’t be surprised if Morcii could do the same.” He then turned back to Frath. “I assume you’ve anticipated this, or you wouldn’t have mentioned a plan B.”

“You assume correctly,” the General responded, “but you won’t like it.”

“I haven’t liked any situation I’ve found myself in over the past several weeks,” Krick retorted. “Just lay it out and I’ll decide if it’s something I can get behind.”

Frath took a deep breath before turning back to the solar system display. He reached over and tapped one of the system’s four terra planets, causing the display to zoom in on the planet. “This is Tau’cen Dii,” he explained as he turned back to face the rest of the room. “It’s an isolated, semi-militarized planet sitting even farther out from the sun than both Gu’Dan and Tau’cen Kii. It is so isolated, in fact, that evacuating non-essential personnel was a trivial task, and the only individuals remaining on the entire planet are those manning a mountain base in the northern hemisphere. It is, I believe, the perfect location for an all-out battle between Chaotics.”

“…And you want us to lure Morcii there.” Krick pursed his lips warily.

Frath nodded. “Yes. As we all know, the Ayas did little to help the shielding situation of either Oriciid’kas or Siionkagh, but we also know that the Ayas were the first things Morcii targeted within the system, not to mention that his stated goal itself is to claim all of them. Given this, I believe we can forgo using the Ayas to boost any of our technology — as it would be a useless effort, anyways — and instead use them to lure Morcii away from the main fight. Once isolated, we can attempt to subdue him, or in the very least discern his true strength and abilities for future plans.”

“I assume this is why you’ve brought me here,” Krydonin commented.

“You assume correctly. Should Morcii prove resistant to beaming, use the Ayas to lure him to Tau’cen Dii, where the Black Suns Chaotic Squads and Hero Machina can engage Morcii. With your numbers, skill, and varied abilities, I believe you stand a decent chance against him.”

“You’re right,” Krick responded flatly, “I don’t like this plan.” He then sighed wearily as he rubbed his forehead. “…But I don’t see any other solution to the matter.”

“I still don’t like the idea of facing Morcii head-on, though,” Kevérin interjected. “He was easily able to counter the First Tier Chaos State. He’s even immune to Subspatial Storage! Not to mention how fast he is. I’m not as confident as you that a bunch of Chaotics could stand up to him.”

“While I appreciate your caution, I think you underestimate the Black Suns,” Krydonin countered. “As I understand it, you’ve seen little of how we operate, and your encounter with Sector 2 back on Teghica is in no way representative of the whole organization. You may not have been able to see me in action when I accompanied you on Rossindon, but I assure you, the Black Suns can hold our own.”

“…If you say so.”

“I understand that this plan is far from optimal,” Frath commented, giving Ukinon a quick glance as she hurriedly left the room before returning his attention to everyone else. “But, given our current information and ability, I believe it is the best way to prolong our fight with the Nanocreature fleets, evacuate as many civilians to safety as possible, and, in the end, obtain a proper assessment of Morcii’s abilities in order to come up with a plan to dispatch him in the future.”

“You’re not wrong…” Krick sighed. “Doesn’t mean I like it. But you’re not wrong.”

“I have one question, however,” Krydonin addressed Frath directly, “the garrison I brought with me to this system was meant to guard the Gate on Tau’cen Kii, to prevent a similar situation to the loss of control on Oriciid’kas. Do you mean to move that garrison to Tau’cen Dii entirely? What about the Gate?”

“The Gate is being lifted into space, blocked, and locked in a vacuum container as an absolute countermeasure to just that scenario,” Frath stated. “I don’t mean to say that I distrust the Black Suns, Commander, but just as I must be wary of corruption amongst my own soldiers, so too must I be wary of corruption amongst yours. Lifting the Gate prevents all attempts to control it and frees your garrison for commitment to Tau’cen Dii.”

Krydonin nodded. “Understandable.”

“Is that it, then?” Krick questioned, “I understand the plan and what you need me and the Genesis to do. Is there anything else?”

“No, that’s it for now,” Frath replied, double-tapping the display and then swiping down with three fingers to shut off the display and brighten the room’s lights. “Further details will be transmitted to your ship and we will keep you updated as to the state of the fleet engagements. But for now, I need all of you to prepare to execute the plan, and as quickly as possible. The Nanocreatures could show up at any moment.”

“You don’t know how true that is,” Ukinon remarked as she stepped back into the room. “Long-range sensors began picking up incoming fleets five minutes ago. The Nanocreatures are here.”

Chapter 63 – Return to Chaos

“Chaos Bla—ngh?!

Morcii smashed his elbow into Kievkenalis’s chest with great force, cutting off the Chaostechnic’s attack and launching him straight through the entire outer tower to the barren arctic wastelands outside the base. Wilkas immediately jumped forward and slammed his fist into Morcii, sending the Nanocreature leader flying sideways into the nearest wall — but he flipped himself around midair, impacting the wall with his feet and instantly launching himself back at the Forcetechnic, smashing into him and sending the both of them tumbling through the hole Kievkenalis had just created. Vélunis quickly rushed after them, vaulting through the hole himself as he created two claymores and lunged toward Morcii, slicing off his arms and separating him from Wilkas. Kievkenalis took advantage of the opportunity to launch several Chaos Cannon and Strike attacks at Morcii, but the Nanocreature’s disembodied arms blocked every attack as Morcii himself dashed forward, reaching Kievkenalis in the blink of an eye and head-butting him fiercely before following up with a roundhouse kick that sent the Chaostechnic flying over a hundred meters away.

The moment Morcii and Kievkenalis had separated, Vélunis crafted a wide variety of ranged weapons and immediately opened fire on the Nanocreature leader with all of them, blowing the entire area around Morcii to smithereens within seconds. The Formtechnic then created a massive hammer that Wilkas grabbed out of the air as he dashed toward the blast zone; Kievkenalis cleared away the airborne debris with a Chaos Massive Impact just as Wilkas brought the hammer down overhead, smashing it down on Morcii’s location and shattering the terrain for hundreds of meters around. Wilkas then attempted to yank the hammer away as he jumped back, but stumbled when the weapon failed to budge.

“YOUR POWER IS IMPRESSIVE… BUT IT STILL PALES IN COMPARISON TO MY OWN.”

“What?!” Wilkas immediately jumped away from the hammer, warily backing into a defensive stance as Morcii grasped the hammerhead with a single hand… and then completely shattered it.

“Chaos Mach 8 Piercing Cannon!” Kievkenalis shouted, directing a hypersonic projectile toward the Nanocreature leader. But Morcii simply deflected it with the back of his hand, sending the projectile flying to the right where it disappeared past the horizon.

“So much for ‘piercing,’” Vélunis quipped uneasily.

“SURELY, YOU SEE BY NOW HOW OUTCLASSED YOU ARE,” the Nanocreature remarked smugly, and then turned his attention to the skies. “…BE THANKFUL, THEN, THAT MY ATTENTION IS DEMANDED ELSEWHERE… SHOULD WE CONTINUE, I MIGHT FEEL INCLINED TO END THIS FARCE WITH A SINGLE ATTACK.”

…Elsewhere? …You mean Oriciid’kas? Kievkenalis questioned warily, the weight of Morcii’s words alone preventing him from making a move against the Nanocreature.

Morcii snorted in derision. “WHERE ELSE? THERE ARE BUT TWO TARGETS IN THIS SYSTEM WORTH MY ATTENTION.”

And you’re just… leaving us?

“I ASSURE YOU, ALDREDANOID, THIS IS NO ACT OF BENEVOLENCE.” Morcii smirked. “I AM AWARE THAT YOU STILL HOLD THE AYAS. BUT I AM FAR FROM PRESSED FOR TIME… AND IF I WERE TO KILL YOU NOW, WELL. THEN YOU WOULD NOT BE ABLE TO WITNESS MY GIFT FOR YOU AT TAU’CEN KII.”

What—? Kievkenalis started, but before he could continue, the Nanocreature leader had disappeared into the air, soaring through the skies faster than any of the three Chaotics could track.

The moment Morcii completely disappeared from sight, the three Chaotics heaved a collective sigh of relief before Vélunis turned toward Kievkenalis irately.

“Were you trying to get him to kill us?!” he questioned impatiently.

N…no, the Chaostechnic replied sheepishly, but… I was curious why he was leaving us alone…

“He really is powerful,” Wilkas commented as he trudged back to the other two. “…I really did hit him with that hammer. All the force went through, too. I mean, you saw the ground shatter. But it didn’t affect that guy at all! It’s like he wasn’t even there!”

“I don’t know what to think about him…” Vélunis frowned. “…But thinking about him can wait. For now, we need to try to fix up the base and get the Earthians to pick us up.”

Yeah… Kievkenalis nodded warily. …And let’s just hope that whatever Morcii said about Tau’cen Kii doesn’t turn out to be too terrible for us…


“Sir! We’ve just received word that the Nanocreatures have invaded the surface of Oriciid’kas!”

“The what—?!” Krick exclaimed, his brow furrowing in helpless anger. “…How? Was the planet’s shield breached?”

“No, the planetary shielding is still intact… it would seem that they came through the Gate itself. One of the CSA officials in charge of the Oriciid’kas Gate was apparently corrupted, and disengaged the Gate’s block, thereby allowing the Nanocreatures through…”

“…Well, if the Nimalians are to be believed, the Nanocreatures started out as the so-called ‘metallic infection,’ and have had twenty years to spread before becoming a noticeable threat, so we can’t say that this was wholly unexpected. But at the same time — does the CSA really not have any fail-safes in place to prevent one individual from disengaging the Gate’s block?!”

“That’s what the news feed said, sir…”

“I know, I know…” the Captain muttered. “…This system is falling far too quickly. It’s been two days since the Nanocreatures attacked. Two days! And already we’re at the same point that all of the other systems were at when the CSA abandoned them, yet this one is supposed to be the CSA capital! This doesn’t sit well at all…” He paused for several moments, staring at the bridge displays before shaking his head warily and speaking up again. “We’ve almost reached the polar fleet; the moment we’re able, scan the polar generator. If it’s in pieces then immediately scan for the Ayas and beam it up—!”

A string of lights spontaneously appeared in the distant space ahead of the Genesis, startling and interrupting Krick’s orders as it drew the attention of the entire bridge.

“…What is that?” the Captain questioned as the string of lights wove through space in wide, sweeping arcs.

“…It’s explosions,” one of the bridge officers replied slowly, “…something is weaving through the polar fleet and destroying every ship it touches!”

“For the love of— get us out of here!” Krick barked, “we are not sticking around for—!”

Before he could even finish his sentence, the string of lights turned toward the Genesis itself; a mere moment later the entire ship shuddered under a massive impact, throwing everyone violently to the floor.

“Status report!” Krick barked as he haphazardly scrambled back into the commander’s chair.

“Shields are down to sixty-three percent! The shock off-lined the Subspace Drive as well! …Sir, it would seem the object that hit us is still floating a short distance away—”

“Scan it! With every sensor suite we have!”

“Yes sir! …Uh… …sir, this is…”

“Huh?” Krick glanced down at the officer in confusion before another hologram appeared amongst the bridge displays, showing a camera feed of the object that had impacted the ship. The Captain’s mouth fell agape in a mixture of disbelief and fear as he beheld the humanoid form floating in space. “…Morcii?!”

As soon as the Captain identified the Nanocreature leader, he disappeared from the camera feed. At the same moment, several of the long range sensors began giving alerts for a high-speed object rushing away from Siionkagh; Krick observed all of the alerts with confusion before turning his attention back to the distant polar fleet. “…What the hell just happened?”


A gigantic mass of ice rose from the ground outside of the Oriciid’kas North Pole base, sweeping over the hordes of metallic bugs approaching the facility and completely immobilizing them. Kaoné quickly transmuted the ice into solid steel just as Davídrius leaped forward, tearing through several larger Nanocreature beasts as Kevérin took to the skies and began raining fire on the army below. Once all three Chaotics were clear of the outer tower’s walls, Kaoné turned on her heel and sealed all of the base entrances, leaving alone only the wall openings for weapon turrets as they opened fire on the approaching Nanocreatures.

“They made it into the base, you know!” Davídrius shouted back before impaling two bugs on his blades. “Just sealin’ everythin’ won’t stop those!”

“None of us are well equipped to fight in enclosed areas,” Kevérin countered. “We’ll have to leave the base interior to the CSA guard. We just need to help keep the Nanocreatures at bay!”

“Easier said than done…” Kaoné muttered.

“Maybe, but maybe not…” Davídrius eyed the several CSA Chaotic squads that had spread out around the base exterior. “It’s not just us this time — maybe we stand a chance. But we definitely won’t if we just stand around! C’mon!”

The Velocitechnic immediately dashed off again, leaving Kevérin to raise back into the air — just in time to be attacked by several flying Nanocreature monsters, each possessing the size and shape of large birds. The Pyrotechnic’s armor protected him from direct harm, but he still took a second to regain his bearings before bathing the air around him in searing fire as he called out, “Overdrive: Unrelenting Flame!” Kaoné quickly transmuted the air around the burnt creatures into lead, trapping them in dense spheres that she then slammed into the battlefield, obliterating several smaller Nanocreatures as Kevérin followed up with more fire blasts before moving away to assault the horde on his own.

Davídrius continued to rush through the Nanocreature ranks, slicing and kicking with speeds faster than anyone could track while remaining careful to not get caught by any of Kaoné’s or Kevérin’s massive sweeping attacks. He easily made up for his inability to target multiple bugs at once with his extreme speed, racking up a high enough kill count to match or even surpass either of the other two Nimalian Chaotics. Within a surprisingly short period of time the three Chaotics, working in tandem with the CSA squads, had cleared out a half-kilometer area surrounding the polar base and continued to make short work of the approaching Nanocreatures.

“Haha! What pushovers!” Davídrius whooped, preparing to dash off again and continue attacking. “Some threat these guys are—!”

“Davídrius, wait!” Kevérin interjected, stopping the Velocitechnic in his tracks.

The Tresédian scowled impatiently. “What is it? We’ve actually got the bastards on the run!”

“And that’s the problem…” The Transfer Captain frowned, slowly reducing the power of his flame jets until he alighted on the ground next to Davídrius. Kaoné quickly approached as well.

“What’s wrong?” she questioned warily.

“This situation isn’t right,” Kevérin responded. “…It’s like Maasen all over again. Back then, we were fighting basic Drakkar foot soldiers and got carried away with how easy it was to fight them, and then we got lured into battles with Drakkar faction leaders because of it. And now, here, we’re fighting basic Nanocreature foot soldiers, and we’re getting carried away with how easy it is to fight them…”

“Do you think Morcii’ll show up soon?” Davídrius dropped his impatient demeanor as he turned to face Kevérin with alarm.

“I expect something to show up soon.” The Pyrotechnic glanced back at the outer tower uneasily. “…We need to pull back—”

Without warning, a massive force slammed into the polar base’s inner tower from above, completely obliterating it and shattering the entire base’s foundation as well as the outer tower’s walls.

“The— the shield generator!!” Kaoné exclaimed.

“What the fuck?!” Davídrius jumped back in surprise.

“I fucking knew it— Kaoné!” Kevérin barked, “clear us a path! We need to get to the Ayas, now!

“R-right!” The Materiatechnic quickly began creating a steel path through the air as Kevérin and Davídrius impatiently followed behind her. They soon reached the outer tower wall; the very moment Kaoné tore a hole through the wall, Davídrius dashed through, followed by Kevérin as he immediately bathed the interior of the base with flames.

“I SEE YOU’RE WASTING NO TIME TO GAWK! YOUR COMBAT PROWESS IS IMPROVING.”

The three Chaotics instantly recognized Morcii’s mocking voice, but none of them stopped to address him. Kaoné quickly created a five-meter steel-and-diamond-reinforced ceiling in an effort to trap Morcii, while Davídrius rushed forward to distract the Nanocreature leader as Kevérin flew over to the remains of the shield generator. Without a second to spare, the Pyrotechnic began incinerating the debris and digging through the rubble in an effort to find the Ayas.

“MIGHT YOU BE LOOKING FOR THIS?”

“What—?” Kevérin snapped his attention toward Morcii just as the Nanocreature leader leaped into the air, hovering several meters above the ground as he held out Mystryth, the White Chaos Ayas. “…How—?”

“YOU TRULY FAIL TO GRASP JUST HOW MASSIVELY OUTCLASSED YOU ARE, DON’T YOU?” Morcii chuckled. “I MUST SAY — YOU AND YOUR KIND ARE CERTAINLY LEARNING, LEARNING TO CHOOSE YOUR FIGHTS AND HOW TO COUNTER MY FORCES. BUT YOU AREN’T LEARNING FAST ENOUGH, AND YOU’VE YET TO LEARN HOW TO COUNTER ME — AND I ALONE COULD TAKE ON THE ENTIRE GALAXY IF I SO CHOSE! YOU WILL NEVER GIVE ME AS MUCH OF A CHALLENGE AS THE ALDREDAS ONCE DID. WITHIN THE MONTH, EVERY ONE OF YOUR TRANSPACE WORLDS WILL BE MINE… YOU CANNOT POSSIBLY HOPE TO DEFEAT ME!”

Kevérin scowled, unsure of how to respond to Morcii’s claims. He glanced warily down at Davídrius and Kaoné — just in time to catch the Materiatechnic jerk her head slightly. Kevérin snapped his attention back to Morcii just as a massive steel pillar appeared directly above the Nanocreature and slammed him into the ground; the Pyrotechnic immediately dove after him, shouting, “Chaos State: First–nngh!!

He was painfully interrupted as Morcii instantly tore through the steel pillar, grabbed Kevérin by his neck, and slammed him into the wall of the outer tower with enough force to completely obliterate the entire structure. The Pyrotechnic’s energy shielding and Overdrive State protected him from significant damage, but the blow still stunned him long enough for Morcii to encase his wrists and ankles in bonds made of Nanocreature nanites as the leader himself hovered just over ten meters away.

“WHAT MAY HAVE WORKED ONCE WILL NOT SUCCEED AGAIN!” Morcii declared. “I’VE HAD MY FUN. IN MINUTES, YOUR ARMOR’S SHIELDING WILL FAIL, AND I WILL THEN BE FREE TO CORRUPT YOU AS I PLEASE!” He slowly turned toward Kaoné and Davídrius, who had both frozen where they stood in surprise and awe at the raw speed and power of Morcii’s actions. He slowly extended his left arm toward Kaoné as he added, “I HOPE NEITHER OF YOU PLAN ON RUNNING. BUT JUST IN CASE YOU DID…”

The Nanocreature leader fired his entire lower arm toward Kaoné at hypersonic speeds — but in the very instant his arm separated from his body, Davídrius leaped into the air, smashing his blades against the projectile with enough force to shatter both blades and knock the arm off course. The Velocitechnic ignored the new hole in the wall beside Kaoné as he quickly shouted midair, “Chaos State: First Tier!

The Ayas disappeared from Morcii’s hand as Davídrius fell back to the ground. The Nanocreature leader immediately dived after him, but the Velocitechnic leaped out of the way just in time to avoid obliteration. He quickly summoned the Mystryth bow and yanked its string back before releasing it, haphazardly firing an arrow at Morcii. The hypersonic projectile blew a hole through the Nanocreature’s torso before smashing into and piercing the outer wall, instantly creating a massive hole all the way through it. Davídrius smirked at the sight before ducking under a punch thrown by Morcii. He then attempted to back flip away, but stumbled as Morcii caught his foot and flung him toward the far wall. The Velocitechnic quickly righted himself midair and pulled back the bowstring as he landed on the ground again, taking aim at Morcii once more and firing. The arrow once again flew through Morcii, this time blowing off his right arm; in addition, the leftover stub glowed blue for a brief moment, but the glow quickly disappeared with no consequence.

Morcii immediately jumped backwards and into the air, glancing down at the debris that the arrow had struck just as the damaged metal dissolved into tiny blue particles that then disappeared into the air. “…SO YOU ATTEMPTED TO USE SUBSPATIAL STORAGE ON ME? I SEE YOU’VE BEEN SPEAKING WITH THE PRIORS.”

Tch…! Davídrius scowled, quickly firing another arrow at Morcii in frustration, only to have the same effect: none.

“A CLEVER IDEA, TO BE SURE.” Morcii nodded in approval. “BUT YOU HAVE CHOSEN THE WRONG OPPONENT TO USE IT ON. I CAN DISSOCIATE NANOMACHINES FROM MY BODY AT WILL; I CAN THEREFORE EASILY CIRCUMVENT THE CONTINUOUS BODY RULE OF SUBSPATIAL STORAGE. IN FACT, ANY NANOCREATURE CAN, EVEN THE LOWLY ‘FOOT SOLDIERS,’ AS YOU CALLED THEM. I’M AFRAID THIS TACTIC SIMPLY WON’T WORK AGAINST ME… YOU CANNOT DEFEAT ME QUITE SO EASILY.”

…Tch. The Velocitechnic smirked spitefully. What will it take to defeat you?

The Nanocreature leader smirked back. “I’M INTERESTED TO SEE IF YOU CAN FIND OUT.”

Morcii then dived toward Davídrius, prompting the Velocitechnic to leap out of the way. However, instead of counterattacking, he quickly aimed Mystryth toward Kevérin — who was still trapped in the air by Nanocreature shackles — and fired. The arrow effectively phased through the Pyrotechnic before he disappeared in a blue mist.

“Davídrius, what are you—?!” Kaoné exclaimed, but her statement was cut off as the Velocitechnic fired an arrow at and Subspatially stored her as well.

Hopefully, he muttered to himself as he leaped through one of the massive holes in the tower walls and began sprinting at hypersonic speeds across the polar tundra, …hopefully, I just saved all our asses…


“What’s going on?!”

“We’re getting our asses kicked, that’s what’s going on.” Krick scowled, not even bothering to glance back at Kievkenalis, Vélunis, or Wilkas as he responded. The three Chaotics had been beamed up to the Genesis less than half an hour ago, and the Battlecruiser was now busy joining the Siionkagh polar defense fleet in an attempt to drive back the increasing numbers of Nanocreature ships. “…Do you have the Ayas with you?”

Kievkenalis nodded. Yeah. I was able to keep it out of Morcii’s hands with the Chaos State.

“Wait— are you saying you had a direct confrontation with Morcii?”

“Yep,” Vélunis replied tersely.

“…He left before we beamed you up.” The Earthian Captain finally swiveled his chair around to face the Chaotics directly. “So you’re saying you got into a fight with him, but he retreated? Did you manage to beat him?!”

“No, he just left.” Wilkas shrugged. “He just stopped fighting and… left.”

He said something about his attention being required elsewhere, Kievkenalis added warily, and then he said something about a surprise at Tau’cen Kii.

“Confident little bastard assumes this system is as good as his, huh?” Krick snorted, and then frowned as he returned his attention to the bridge displays. “…Well… he isn’t exactly wrong. Just before we picked you up, he single-handedly obliterated a full tenth of the polar fleets.”

What?! The Chaostechnic snapped his attention up to the bridge displays but faltered when he realized that he couldn’t read any of the Earthian text. What’s the status of the system?

“Twenty-five space stations have been either destroyed or breached, seventeen of those housing upwards of a billion inhabitants… two of the fleets defending Oriciid’kas have been either wiped out or assimilated, and each of the five fleets defending Siionkagh have been reduced to half their strength at best. The North Pole planetary shield generators on both Siionkagh and Oriciid’kas have been destroyed, the Oriciid’kas Gate has been breached and Nanocreatures are flooding across the planet’s surface, and the Nanocreatures are beginning to make planetfall on the other terra planets in the system as well.”

“The Oriciid’kas generator was destroyed? Wasn’t everyone else stationed there? And the Ayas, too?” Vélunis questioned, “are they okay?”

“There’s no way for us to know. The planet’s fallen under a complete network blackout, and the Nanocreature presence in orbit is increasing past the point of safe escape, even for us,” Krick responded wearily.

Wait, so you’re saying you’re not even going to check?! Kievkenalis exclaimed, but, you can’t—! We at least need to recover the Ayas, right?!

“We do,” the Earthian Captain replied as he squinted at a new information box among the many bridge displays, “…but we can’t afford an extensive search. We can swing by the pole and make a quick scan for the Ayas and your friends, but we can’t afford to waste too much time here.”

’Waste?!’ What else would we be doing?

“Pulling back,” Krick stated flatly. “We’ve received an order directly from System Command: we’re to fall back to Tau’cen Kii and help the forces there try to invent a better defense plan.”

“…We’re pulling back?” Vélunis echoed uneasily. “We’re… abandoning the system?”

“Not… completely. The current defense fleets will stay behind in an effort to stall the Nanocreatures. But we have an Ayas, and we have some data on Morcii’s demolition streak, so we’ll be of more help to Tau’cen Kii, which is still fully intact for now, than we would be here.”

System Command is still acknowledging the fact that we can’t take back the system, though, Kievkenalis muttered. So… we’ve lost, haven’t we?

Krick stared hard at the bridge displays, and then out through the Genesis’s massive bridge window to the battles outside and the planet below. “…Yeah… we’ve lost. The Oriciid’kas system is as good as gone.”

Chapter 62 – Beachhead

“Morcii made Planetfall?!”

“Ye…yeah…” Kevérin replied slowly, staring dumbfoundedly at the information feed on his glasses. “…He obliterated the Siionkagh primary generator in one strike.”

“What?!” Kaoné exclaimed, “but, how did he—? How could he…?”

The Pyrotechnic scowled. “Hell if I know. He’s never— …there haven’t been any reports of Morcii breaking through shielding on any of the other planets. He didn’t— it’s not possible. He would have needed at least a teraton’s worth of force to make any kind of noticeable dent in those shields! That’s— if he hit the planet itself with that force, that’d be enough to cause an extinction event, I mean— …if Morcii can really output that much force, that’s, that’s, that’s insane!”

“Aren’t… aren’t Kevken, Vélunis, and Wilkas all stationed at the Siionkagh generator?” Kaoné questioned as she began to wring her hands in worry. “If they… are they okay?”

“I don’t know…” Kevérin furrowed his brow in frustration. “They aren’t important enough to post about on the info feed. The Genesis isn’t close enough to their location to get a focused sensor reading, either. So… there’s no way for us to know.”

“You know what this means for us, right?” Davídrius cut in impatiently, “Morcii attacked the generator ‘cause the Ayas was there, didn’t he? Well guess where he’d go next then, huh?!”

“There are many different reasons for him to attack the generator,” Kevérin countered, “…but all of them would have him hitting Oriciid’kas as a follow-up anyways. You’re right. But what can we possibly do against that? Nothing short of a Capital ship could stop that kind of force!”

“…I hate to say it…” Davídrius frowned. “But our best bet might be to grab the Ayas and run. If Morcii can really output as much force as you’re sayin’ he can, then none of us stand a chance against him.”

Where would we run?” Kevérin questioned. “The Gate’s blocked; we can’t leave the planet. And even then… we can’t just abandon Oriciid’kas, not this quickly.”

“You say that, but stickin’ around won’t help much either, you know!”

“Weren’t you the one who wanted to fight Morcii?”

“Sure, before we learned that he single-handedly broke through the Ayas-reinforced planetary shields,” Davídrius retorted. “Fuck fightin’ him now — we can try that later when we have more Ayas with us!”

“I wonder if the Ayas actually mean anything, now,” Kevérin responded warily. “They sure as hell didn’t stop Morcii.”

“But…” Kaoné worriedly glanced between the other two Chaotics. “…What do we do?”

The three sat in uneasy silence before Kevérin sighed and spoke up again. “I’ll try to contact the Genesis through the system’s Relaynet, and just hope that the relays are still intact. Hopefully, Krick will have some more input…”

“Sounds like a plan, now get to it,” Davídrius urged.

“Right, right… Command: contact the E.S.C. Genesis. …Command: contact the E.S.C. Genesis…!”

“Uh oh…” Kaoné muttered as Kevérin’s frown deepened. “What’s wrong…?”

“Comms have cut out…” the Transfer Captain replied uneasily, “there’s nothing coming or leaving. We’ve gone dark.”


“Chaos Cannon!”

Morcii lunged forward, effortlessly knocking away the Chaos Energy projectile as he grabbed one of Vélunis’s many weapons out of the air and swung it toward Wilkas. The Forcetechnic blocked the blade with his palm, allowing his armor’s shielding to protect his hand as he thrust his other first forward, impacting Morcii’s chest and launching him across the grounds at Mach speeds. Vélunis immediately summoned dozens of railguns and fired them all simultaneously, obliterating the entire far wall and further exposing the outer tower of the polar base to the elements. Kievkenalis quickly cleared the resulting smoke and debris with Chaos Massive Impact, but was suddenly whacked in the face as Morcii burst through the invisible force with his fists forward. He grabbed the Chaostechnic by his arm and whirled him through the air before throwing him at Vélunis, just in time to leap into the air to avoid a metal beam thrown by Wilkas. Upon returning to the ground, the Nanocreature leader attempted to leap upwards again but was smashed back into the ground by a massive sword that simply dropped on top of his head, completely shearing his body in two.

Before any of the Chaotics could sigh of relief, however, the two body halves sprung forward, knocking Wilkas to the ground before reconnecting to reform Morcii’s full body and allow him to stomp the Forcetechnic’s back with enough force to instantly create a two-meter deep crater. Kievkenalis immediately replied by launching several Chaos Cannon attacks at Morcii, driving back the Nanocreature leader and allowing Wilkas to jump back to his feet and punch the crater wall, shattering the ground under Morcii and causing him to stumble. Vélunis quickly launched a hail of bladed weapons, darkening the sky just above Morcii as Kievkenalis dashed toward him from the side, gesturing for the two other Chaotics to stand back. Then, just before reaching Morcii, he shouted, “Chaos BLAST!”

A massive sphere of purple energy exploded from the Chaostechnic, obliterating everything within fifty meters and blowing back everything else within a hundred. Vélunis and Wilkas both quickly recovered and dashed up to the crater created by the blast before eying the results in surprise.

“You never told us you were an explosive type!” Wilkas shouted down at Kievkenalis.

It never came up—?! the Chaostechnic replied, but was interrupted as Morcii burst upwards from the ground beneath him, nailing Kievkenalis in the jaw with a hardened fist of steel. The Chaostechnic flew up and back, covering several meters of damaged terrain before painfully tumbling back to the ground.

“AS EXPECTED…” Morcii smirked, observing Kievkenalis as he quickly climbed back to his feet and massaged his jaw. “THE CHAOS STATE HAS RAISED YOUR DURABILITY SIGNIFICANTLY, BUT I CAN STILL OVERWHELM IT IF I DESIRE.”

“You tryin’ to say you’re not being serious?” Wilkas countered.

“OF COURSE,” the Nanocreature replied dismissively, “IF I WERE TRULY FIGHTING FOR VICTORY, THEN THE LOT OF YOU WOULD HAVE BEEN POUNDED TO DUST BEFORE YOU EVEN REALIZED THE BATTLE BEGAN.”

“…Right,” Vélunis drawled. “Those are some big words for a scrawny guy like you. Storm Blade!”

Wilkas and Kievkenalis immediately jumped back as nearly a hundred blades appeared several meters over Morcii’s head. Within a second of creation, Vélunis slammed them all into the ground, piercing Morcii’s body all over and littering the area around him with embedded metal rods — rods that Kievkenalis quickly charged with Chaos Charge, and then shouted, “Chaos Strike!” The strike of Chaos Energy hit the rods instantly, amplifying the electrical charge in the area enough to create actual lightning strikes that stunned Morcii and prevented him from moving as Wilkas leaped into the air and brought his fists down over the Nanocreature’s head. On impact, Morcii disappeared into the ground as the entire area inside the outer tower shattered and cratered, further destroying the outer tower and launching loose debris and dust clouds into the air.

“…I knew he was all words,” Wilkas remarked with a smirk, wiping his hands as the dust began to settle.

No… this isn’t right… Kievkenalis frowned uneasily. This is nothing like our encounter back on Maasen. He might still be around—

“HOW VERY ASTUTE.”

“What?!” Vélunis spun around to face the section of obliterated wall behind him. Standing on top of a loose metal beam hanging precariously several meters in the air was none other than Morcii himself, arms crossed as he stared down at the three Chaotics.

“How’d he get up there?!” Wilkas exclaimed incredulously.

“HA! THIS BATTLE HAS PROVEN MILDLY INTERESTING,” Morcii remarked, “THOUGH YOUR UNEARNED CONFIDENCE IS PAINFULLY TYPICAL OF ALDREDANOIDS, I FIND. LET US SEE IF YOU CAN KEEP ME FURTHER ENTERTAINED FOR THE TIME BEING, HMM?”

“…Guys?…” Vélunis muttered uneasily as he brandished two rifles.

We can’t outrun him; we’re stuck until the Genesis can pick us up. Kievkenalis scowled. …We just have to last until then. Chaos Assist!


“The Nanocreatures are beginning to transfer their fire to Siionkagh itself!”

“Tch, of course they are. Intercept the larger ships! How are Siionkagh’s shields holding?”

“…Not well. The destruction of the North Pole generator reduced the shield’s overall strength by over ninety-nine percent, and the increase in fire from the Nanocreatures is very quickly eating through what’s left. We don’t even have twelve hours at the current rate…”

“Damn…” Krick scowled as he impatiently glanced between bridge displays. “…We can’t wait any longer. Petition the Battle Group leader to move to the Polar Fleet — wait for a response, but we’ll be moving out regardless of what it is!” The Captain then sat back in his chair, rubbing his chin absentmindedly as he awaited the completion of his order. Morcii appeared out of nowhere… not even our sensors could pick him up. We have no way of knowing if he’s still on Siionkagh, or if he’s moved out again, and that means we have no idea if he has the Ayas that was plugged into the generator… damn. This does not bode well for Oriciid’kas.

“Permission to move to the Polar Fleet granted, sir!”

“Set a course immediately!” Krick barked, “full thrust! Be prepared to beam up as many survivors on the ground as possible, particularly the Nimalians, and especially the Ayas!”

“Yes sir! Setting course for Polar Fleet! …Some of the Nanocreature ships have broken off, they’re following us! Twenty-five ships, all Cruiser class!”

“Engage the cloak! Begin acquiring targets immediately — account for weapon power, spread, and accuracy, and begin firing periodically with all weapons in sync. I want each blast wave to wipe out at least five ships!”

“Yes sir! Engaging cloak!”

“Twenty-five Cruisers, huh…” Krick muttered to himself, “they must really not want us to reach the Pole. Or maybe they’re catching on to how dangerous we are to them…”

“Weapons primed! Targets acquired — firing! …Twenty targets remaining!”

“Keep it up, keep it up!” The Captain nodded approvingly. We’re losing the battle for the system, but on a local level, we’re doing perfectly fine. I can’t help but feel wary about this… but there’s no time to worry. The Ayas comes first.


“Will someone please tell me what’s goin’ on here?!”

“If I knew, I’d be more than happy to explain,” Kevérin retorted as he led Kaoné and Davídrius away from the communications center. “No one knows why comms are jammed. If we did, we’d be doing something about it.”

“I can tell you what we can be doin’ about it,” Davídrius insisted, “gettin’ the fuck outta here!”

“We can’t do that, either,” the Transfer Captain countered. “Even if the base commander had issued an evac command, we need to stay with the Ayas and protect it. We can’t let the Nanocreatures have it!”

“Then just take it with us!”

“Take it where?”

“Take it, uh…” Davídrius paused for a moment to think, falling behind Kevérin and Kaoné before dashing back up to the Pyrotechnic. “…I dunno, somewhere not here, maybe?”

“And make it easier for the Nanocreatures to breach Oriciid’kas’s shields and surround us?” Kevérin snorted. “Morcii might be able to puncture the shields with ease, but none of the other Nanocreatures have shown the same ability. The shield is still important.”

“It’d be pretty bad if we lost Oriciid’kas faster than even Bouy’Xis, too,” Kaoné commented.

“…Hn,” Davídrius grunted. “…I don’t like this one bit.”

“No one does,” Kevérin responded, stopping at a small observation deck to stare out at the arctic tundra surrounding the base’s outer tower. “…But the thing is, there’s really nothing we can do, aside from hunkering down. This is a military installation, so at the end of the day, this is the best place for the Ayas to be.”

“Are you sure? Maybe there’s a more secure base on the planet somewhere?” Kaoné suggested.

“Not on Oriciid’kas. This is primarily a civilian world; the largest bases are at the poles, where the primary shield generators are.” The Pyrotechnic sighed wearily. “If we were on Siionkagh, then there would be alternatives. But this base is literally the most fortified it gets.”

“Question: how much of that ‘fortification’ is ‘cause of the climate?” Davídrius retorted, “’cause if that’s what it is, then it won’t do much against the Nanocreatures ‘cause they’re, well, you know. Machines.”

“Relax,” Kevérin replied. “We’ll still have plenty of warning time before the base itself is attacked. The Nanocreatures still have to break through the shield, after all—”

The entire building shuddered violently, interrupting the Transfer Captain’s statement as the three Chaotics were thrown to the ground. Alarms promptly began to sound as all of the base personnel began scrambling in every direction in an urgent yet surprisingly calm manner.

Davídrius scowled. “The fuck’s goin’ on?”

“…Oh no…” Kevérin’s face fell as he turned his attention to his glasses’ information feed.

“…No.” The Velocitechnic stared at the Pyrotechnic incredulously. “No. Do not say Nanocreatures. It is not the Nanocreatures.”

“…But it is.” Kevérin looked up at Davídrius warily. “…The Nanocreatures just attacked this base. Directly.”

Chapter 61 – Breakthrough

2 Days Later

Windia, Skydiath 23, 8034 –

“Captain.”

“Oh, Chief Captain.” Bourne quickly stood up from the commander’s chair and faced Krick to give him a salute. He casually saluted back, gesturing for Bourne to resume sitting as he glanced up at the bridge displays. “…You’re an hour early,” the XO remarked after several seconds of silence.

“That last shield shock woke me up,” Krick answered flatly as he absentmindedly scratched his chin. “Couldn’t get back to sleep, so I decided to come up here and check on things.”

“Things have calmed down since the opening of the battle,” Bourne commented as she turned her attention back to the bridge displays. “Nothing new has happened since I last relieved you.”

“So we’re still in a stalemate then, huh…”

“If that’s what you call losing ships at a slightly slower rate than in any other encounter with the Nanocreature fleets to date, then yes, I suppose we are.”

“No, it’s more than that,” Krick countered. “Either the CSA has finally pulled its shit together, or the Nanocreatures are going easy on us, because neither Oriciid’kas nor Siionkagh have taken any major hits. Their shielding is still near maximum. Hell, our shielding is still near maximum, and we’ve been directly engaged with the Nanocreatures for two days, now.”

“I actually wanted to ask you about that, sir.” Bourne eyed Krick warily. “You said that the Genesis outclasses any other ship its size, and based on the reports I read from the encounters at Tyrnaus and Maasen against the Riaxen and the Drakkars, this ship should have firepower and durability on par with a Siion Battleship or so, but… against the Nanocreatures…”

“I know…” Krick furrowed his brow as he stared at the ship status readouts in confusion. “…We’re doing as much damage to the Nanocreatures as any of the Dreadnoughts.”

“Not to mention our shielding is holding up better than many of the Capital ships, as well,” Bourne added. “Even the fighters are substantially outclassing their CSA counterparts. Sir, this is… it’s almost scary.”

“You’re not wrong,” Krick replied as he rubbed his chin in thought, “and I’m just as confused as you are. The reactors are outputting slightly more power than usual, as well… looks like there’s more to this ship than we thought.”

“That’s quite the understatement.”

“Well we can’t complain. I’ll take every edge against the Nanocreatures we can get; we can scrutinize the ship further once we’re out of battle and safe back at Earth. What about the rest of the allied fleet? How are we holding up?”

“…Nearly three thousand ships have been destroyed already, but most of those are Sub-Caps. Namely Cruisers and smaller… we lost a Carrier and a couple Dreadnoughts in the past six hours, though. The Nanocreatures tried to take them over, so we had to destroy the wrecks. We lost the L1 and L3 Siionkagh-moon space stations, as well… the Nanocreatures gained access and began assimilating the entire structure, so we had to obliterate them ourselves.”

“Were the stations evacuated?”

“…Not completely.”

“Damn…”

“…The ships the Nanocreatures have taken over from previous battles are also outperforming their original specs, according to the CSA,” Bourne added. “…They’ve tried hailing the corrupted ships, but there’s never a response.”

“Hmm… out of all the casualties we’ve suffered so far, how many have been from weapons fire, and how many have been from direct assimilation attempts?”

“It’s one and the same, really… the Nanocreatures use weapons fire to take down shielding, and then they deal the final blow by ramming the ship and trying to take it over.”

“For the first four hours, ramming seemed to be the only thing they did,” Krick mused. “They didn’t adopt any formations until eleven hours in, and they only started really focusing on the Siionkagh and Oriciid’kas defense fleets right before your current shift. …Have they employed any real use of strategy since you took control?”

“No, sir…” Bourne frowned. “But they don’t need to. Their armor strength and repairing capabilities outstrip the amount of damage most Sub-Caps can do, if their weapons tracking was even fast enough to hit them. That’s another thing, we’re one of the few ships capable of reliably hitting the Nanocreatures in the first place. Only the Capital ships can achieve the same hit rates, and that’s only because their weapons are so massive.”

“You’re telling me things I already know…”

“We aren’t making any progress against them. If this keeps up, we’ll break in a week, maybe two, and then the Nanocreatures will be free to hit the planets themselves.”

“…Maybe that’s why they haven’t bothered to target the planets yet; they’re trying to destroy any possibility of reinforcements. And there isn’t anything we can do to stop them, not if we keep going on like this.” Krick scratched his chin again, furrowing his brow as he glanced between the bridge displays. “…If something doesn’t change soon, we’ll lose the system.”


“This doesn’t make any sense at all.”

“Well I ain’t complainin’,” Davídrius remarked, speaking around the mouthful of food he was currently chewing. “If the Nanocreatures—”

“Davídrius,” Kaoné cut in as she gave the Velocitechnic a disapproving glare. “Don’t eat with your mouth full like that, it’s disgusting.”

“I didn’t know you were my mom,” he quipped, pointedly ignoring Kaoné’s remark. A moment later he swallowed and turned back to Kevérin as he continued eating. “I don’t know why you’re concerned, though. The Nanocreatures ain’t attackin’ the shields, cool, it means we’ll last longer.”

“It’s not that simple,” Kevérin countered, restlessly glancing around the small cafeteria before continuing, “there has to be a reason for this. They’ve been in the system for two days, and planets are big targets, so it’s not like they’re missing. They have to be pointedly ignoring Oriciid’kas and Siionkagh. But why would they do that?”

“Maybe they’re just focusing on the fleets,” Kaoné suggested.

“Yeah, fere waf a lof of fem!” Davídrius added, the food in his mouth distorting his words. He glanced back at Kevérin and Kaoné in confusion when they paused to stare at him. “…Whaf?”

“Do you always talk while you eat?” Kevérin deadpanned.

The Velocitechnic swallowed before retorting, “only when people feel the need to interrupt my peace and quiet while I eat.”

“Aw, but you looked so lonely,” Kaoné remarked.

Davídrius scowled. “Well I wasn’t.

“And here I thought you might be concerned about current events,” Kevérin drawled.

“Get back to me when somethin’ new happens. In the meantime, I’ll save my very limited concern for other things.”

“Wait…” The Pyrotechnic frowned. “…Have you been paying attention at all to the bulletins?”

“To the what?”

“…Do you have your AR info feed enabled?”

“Keh, no. Why would I? Last thing I want is a text box in the corner of my vision at every damn minute of the day.”

“Then you haven’t heard that Dramantis, Gonaan, and Siionleh have all fallen, have you?”

Davídrius faltered, pausing just before taking another bite out of his meal. “…Say again?”

“You heard me.” Kevérin leaned back and crossed his arms. “Dramantis fell three days ago, and the CSA declared Siionleh and Gonaan lost yesterday. That’s six worlds the CSA has lost. Six Transpace Worlds, of fourteen.”

“Ya know, what does that mean?” Davídrius questioned, “when you say a planet’s fallen, what’s that mean? Planets can’t fall, can they?”

“It means it was lost. The Nanocreatures took it over,” Kevérin replied. “Basically, the CSA believes the worlds are lost past a recoverable point, and that enough system infrastructure has been destroyed or taken over that there’s not enough left to defend.”

“Have the Nanocreatures destroyed any of the actual Transpaces?”

“Oddly enough, no, but any lone ship that tries to jump into a lost system is almost immediately destroyed.”

“Great,” Davídrius deadpanned. “What’s that mean for us?”

“It means the CSA is about to crumble,” Kevérin replied tensely. “…They lost Siionleh. Do you understand the significance of that? The Nanocreatures somehow forced the Siions to abandon their Homeworld. And Citici and Y’kisdral both are only one jump away from Nanocreature-controlled systems, so you can bet that they’ll fall under attack soon, too. But those don’t even matter, because the Siions are practically crushed. Half of their Transpace Worlds are in Nanocreature hands now, and the two that aren’t are cut off from the rest of the CSA. And this is the Siions, the backbone of the CSA military! If they end up losing Oriciid’kas, then that’s just even worse, as the Siions will be completely cut off from the rest of the CSA, which will make it far more difficult for the Citans and Dra’kis to defend their own space. If things keep up as they have been, the CSA will fall apart by the end of the month, and you can guess who’ll be the next targets.”

“The Nimalian Territories…” Kaoné muttered.

“And they’ll take us out much faster than they took out the CSA.” Kevérin sighed in resignation. “…This might actually be the end.”

“Whoa whoa whoa, hold on there,” Davídrius cut in, “it’s a little early to be declarin’ defeat, ain’t it?”

“Do you see a way out of this?”

“Well, beatin’ Morcii, for one.”

Kevérin scowled. “Don’t put too much stock into that plan. At this rate, he doesn’t even have to show up and the Nanocreatures will still win.”

“The planetary shields are still holdin’ up, aren’t they?” Davídrius pointed out, “maybe he’ll show up to speed up the process. We can fight him then.”

If he shows up,” Kevérin countered, “and then there’s the whole issue of fighting him. There’s no way we can win as we are, even if one of us used the First Tier Chaos State; we’ve already gone over that.”

“Says you,” Davídrius snorted and then took another bite of his lunch. “We know what Morcii can do now, so we can put up more of a fight.”

“I doubt—” the Pyrotechnic started and then froze mid-sentence.

“Uh oh…” Kaoné muttered.

“So you saw it, too?” Kevérin sighed warily. “Great. Just great.”

“What? What is it?” Davídrius glanced between the two uneasily.

“An announcement on the info feed,” Kevérin responded irately, “you know how the Gate was being used to evac civilians out of the system?”

“Yeah?…”

“The moment the Gate shut down — you know, to refresh the connection after the two hour mark — the Nanocreatures dialed in. The Gate’s block was activated before many of the bugs could make it through and the bugs themselves have been contained, but…” Kevérin scowled. “…The Gate’s unusable now; the Nanocreatures are sitting on the connection, preventing us from dialing anywhere else. We’re stuck.”


2 Hours Later

“I think this might be it, guys…”

“Huh?” Wilkas glanced toward Kievkenalis. “What’re you talking about?”

“You heard about the Gate getting blocked on Oriciid’kas, right?” the Chaostechnic replied as he stared up at the massive inner tower that housed the Siionkagh primary shield generator. “That might be a sign that the Nanocreatures are getting serious.”

“Implying they aren’t serious already?” Vélunis deadpanned.

“They aren’t even attacking the planetary shielding, that has to be on purpose.”

“Yeah, that is pretty weird,” Wilkas mused. “Planets are big targets. They must be either really bad at aiming, or so good at aiming at other ships that they never miss.”

“Or they’re just far enough away that we aren’t actually that big a target,” Vélunis countered. “Didn’t the fleets engage the Nanocreatures in high orbit? It’s not like misses will have a high chance of hitting us at that distance.”

“…Still…” Kievkenalis frowned. “I have a bad feeling about this…” He continued staring at the shield tower through the large windows of the outer tower that hosted all of the base’s personnel facilities. “…I think I’m going to go check on the Ayas—”

His sentence was cut off as the entire building shuddered violently, throwing the three Chaotics to the ground. The lights flickered and came back on just in time for some unknown force to impact the inner tower from directly above, completely demolishing it and creating a massive shockwave that blew out the windows of the outer tower the Chaotics were sitting in.

“What the hell?!” Wilkas exclaimed, staring at the wrecked tower in awe as freezing arctic air began rushing in through the broken windows. “What was that?!”

“That was the generator getting obliterated!” Kievkenalis immediately jumped to his feet and rushed over to the windows. “The Ayas is there! We need to retrieve it!”

“Kevken—!” Vélunis started, but the Chaostechnic ignored him and vaulted through the window, dropping several meters to the ground below before running toward the tower wreckage. Vélunis and Wilkas quickly followed, landing on the ground from above and smashing their way through the wreckage before stopping in their tracks just behind Kievkenalis.

“What’d you stop for—?” Wilkas started, but froze after realizing what the Chaostechnic was staring at — or rather, who he was staring at.

“HMPH, SO WE MEET AGAIN.”

“…Morcii…” Kievkenalis muttered.

“Oh, so this guy’s Morcii?” Vélunis looked up at the Nanocreature leader. He was standing on a pile of collapsed metal supports, glaring down at the Chaotics as his maroon longcoat and blue robing flapped violently in the arctic winds. “…Doesn’t look as threatening as I had imagined.”

“YOU THINK I DON’T LOOK THREATENING?” Morcii raised an incredulous eyebrow. “I JUST DESTROYED THIS PLANET’S SHIELDING IN ONE BLOW. NEED I DESTROY THE PLANET ITSELF TO SATISFY YOU?”

Vélunis responded with silence, unable to form a reply to the Nanocreature’s dangerously cold tone.

“ANYWAYS…” Morcii smirked as he extended his left arm behind himself and then retracted it, revealing the Light Green Ayas now in his hand. “I HAVE WHAT I CAME HERE FOR—”

Chaos State: First Tier!

A sudden flash of bright white light filled the area before slowly fading away as the Ayas disappeared from Morcii’s hand and into Kievkenalis’s body. The Nanocreature leader stared at the Chaostechnic, dumbfounded, and then broke into a menacing grin. “I SEE YOU’VE LEARNED FROM OUR PAST ENCOUNTER!”

“Kevken…!” Wilkas muttered warningly, “what are you doing…?!”

We have to hold him here, Kievkenalis insisted, his voice taking on the subtle echo indicative of the Chaos State. …Not just that, we also have to wait for the Genesis to return to beaming range before it can pick us up.

“So, basically, we have to stall,” Vélunis deadpanned, and then sighed warily. “…Figures you’d get us into a fight.”

“It’s been a while since we’ve been in a real fight,” Wilkas remarked with a begrudging smirk. “Let’s hope we haven’t lost our edge. Overdrive: Infinite Lift!

“Damn it…” Vélunis scowled. “…Tch. Whatever. Overdrive: Limitless Weaponswright!

“…SO YOU REALLY DO INTEND TO FIGHT ME?” Morcii’s grin widened further. “AND HERE I THOUGHT YOU WERE SIMPLY TRYING TO FOOL ME WITH FALSE BRAVADO. INSTEAD, YOU’RE PLAYING THE PART OF ACTUAL FOOLS! IT WOULD SEEM THAT YOU STILL HAVE MUCH TO LEARN!”

“Chaos Assist, Kievkenalis muttered. …Alright guys, I’ve already activated my distress signal. Hopefully the Earthians can get here soon. But until then—!

“We got you!” Wilkas exclaimed — and then lunged forward. “Let’s go!!”

Chapter 60 – Capital of the Galaxy

3 Days Later

– Mondia, Skydiath 20, 8034 –

“So this is the so-called ‘Capital of the Galaxy,’ huh?”

“Capital of the Galaxy?” Captain Krick echoed incredulously. “Oriciid’kas is the capital of the CSA, but I wouldn’t call it the capital of the whole damn galaxy.”

“It’s just a nickname,” Kievkenalis replied while maintaining his focus on the Genesis’s bridge window. “The CSA is the most culturally and politically influential entity in the galaxy. The Drakkars are just a threat, after all — they don’t have any real influence per se, and the Taizen races keep to themselves. So the CSA effectively runs the galaxy.”

“They like to think they run the galaxy,” Vélunis corrected, “but they don’t hold any real sway over us Nimalians. They had to ask for our help, after all.”

“Ideally, they wouldn’t need to…” Krick muttered as he observed a far-away space station, magnified as a hologram to allow the bridge inhabitants to inspect it more closely. Not much about its appearance was remarkable, as it looked to be little more than a series of cylinders jutting out from a central shaft, but it’s size… “Christ, that thing is huge! Each of those shafts looks like they’re tens of kilometers across… People live on that?”

“I’ve heard that a single station in this system can host millions,” Kievkenalis remarked, “and there’s a station sitting at every Lagrange point of the five terra planets. And then even more than that.”

“…This is ridiculous…” Wilkas frowned uneasily. “There’s so many people in this system. How the hell does the CSA plan to protect them all?”

“They don’t,” Krick replied. “They only have a vested interest in the planet of Oriciid’kas itself and Siionkagh, the local Fortress World. Why do you think those are the only planets they requested you help reinforce?”

“That’s only because Oriciid’kas and Siionkagh are the only planets with decent planetary shielding,” Kievkenalis countered. “There’s no way the other three can be protected from the Nanocreatures in any reasonable fashion, but surely the CSA is at least orchestrating a mass evacuation of the system?”

“Ha,” Vélunis snorted. “And where would they all go? There’s over a hundred billion people living in this system, that’s more than all of the Homeworlds in the galaxy combined. No other system could possibly handle taking in this many refugees.”

“Which is all the more reason to help out the CSA,” Krick stated. “…Your friends should already be on Oriciid’kas, right?”

Kievkenalis nodded. “They should be, yes. Kevérin, Kaoné, and Davídrius took the Ayas Mystryth with them through the Gate a couple days ago, so hopefully the Ayas is already plugged into the planet’s shields.”

“That leaves us to help reinforce Siionkagh,” Krick mused. “…I wonder if we can really make a difference.”

“That prototype FTL Drive should definitely help,” Wilkas remarked, “if the CSA can start mass-producing those, then that alone would help a whole lot.”

“Wilkas is right.” Kievkenalis nodded again. “That’s why we’re here anyways, isn’t it? To transport one of the prototype Drives. I don’t really think the Genesis itself would make a difference, since it is only one ship, albeit a massively advanced one…”

“I think you guys are overlooking the best systems of the Genesis,” Krick countered, “the Subspace Drive is great, sure, but the beaming systems are far more tactically useful. The CSA can hold out against the Nanocreatures for weeks in space, likely, but it’s all over once they make Planetfall. That’s how Bouy’Xis and Metorilis were lost. But the beaming systems — if the CSA had that, then they could’ve actually put up an effort on the ground. …Unfortunately, the beaming systems seem a lot harder to reverse-engineer than the Subspace Drive was.”

Vélunis frowned. “I dunno, would they really make that much of a difference?”

“They’re what saved us from Morcii back on Maasen,” Kievkenalis pointed out, “and I have a feeling that they’re going to be what saves us if we ever encounter Morcii again. Hopefully we won’t, but, well… you never know.”

“If you see Morcii planetside, then it means the planetary shields have failed, and we’ll have pulled you out long before then,” Krick stated. “…That said, he’ll probably show up at least on the space front. According to the battle reports I’ve read, he’s only appeared on battlefields three times since Maasen, and each time it was when the CSA almost seemed to be developing a steady defense. Seems like he lets his forces do most of the work, and then shows up himself to break any particularly strong defense. He was there for the fall of both Bouy’Xis and Metorilis, for example. So, given that…” The Captain paused to squint at a display toward the front of the bridge. “…And given how much military might is garrisoned in this system, I wouldn’t be surprised if the metallic bastard showed his face soon.”

“Huh?” Wilkas tried to find the display Krick was staring at. “…What do you mean?”

“If I remember the briefings right, a typical, full-sized Siion fleet is five thousand ships, with a heavy skew towards Dreadnoughts and Battleships. Citan fleet sizes are about three thousand strong, with a skew more towards Carriers than Dreadnoughts, and Dra’kis are a little smaller, with a higher focus on Sub-Caps. Mixed CSA fleets sit around four thousand strong. …There are currently ten fleets stationed in this system. The 22nd Siion fleet, the 15th Citan fleet, and mixed fleets 1st through 8th. Over forty thousand spacecraft.”

“…Damn.”

“For reference, three Dra’kis fleets were lost at Bouy’Xis before the remaining two retreated, and four Citan fleets were lost at Metorilis before it was abandoned.”

“Is ten really enough, then?…” Kievkenalis commented warily.

“Maybe, maybe not, but you have to keep in mind that every fleet that’s sitting here is a fleet that isn’t helping to defend any of the planets currently under attack, not to mention that the CSA fleet reserves are in no way infinite,” Krick pointed out. “That’s not all there is, anyways; looks like the CSA are committing several Super-Caps to this system as well. Seven Motherships are stationed in the Tau’cen Kii system and are prepared to launch their full fighter squadrons through the Transpace, and… two Deathnoughts, a whole two Deathnoughts, are currently in system, right now. The Siion Dakonis Raath, in orbit around Siionkagh, and the Dra’kis On’esstin, in orbit around Oriciid’kas.” The Captain whistled in awe. “The CSA really are serious about protecting this system.”

Vélunis snorted. “Of course they are, it’s their capital.”

“All the more reason for us to help as much as we can,” Krick replied. “…Alright, we’re approaching Siionkagh. We’ll be in a stable middle orbit within the hour, and after that we can figure out how to deliver the prototype Drive, and how to get your Ayas to their shields.”

“Sounds good.” Kievkenalis nodded as he turned toward the bridge exit, signaling for Vélunis and Wilkas to follow. “C’mon, guys, let’s suit up.”

“Suit up?” Wilkas echoed incredulously. “We’re just here to reinforce the shields. We shouldn’t be doing any fighting; why bother with armor?”

“Better safe than sorry,” the Chaostechnic responded wearily. “…Though, against the Nanocreatures, we might not have the latter option.”


“For the supposed ‘Capital of the Galaxy,’ this place feels really desolate.”

“Well of course it does.” Kevérin rolled his eyes. “We’re at the North Pole. It’s not exactly a major population center.”

“I can certainly see why,” Davídrius deadpanned as he glared out the tower window at the vast swathes of tundra below. “…Man, why’d we have to come straight to the coldest damn place on the planet?”

“Because this is where the primary planetary shield generator is. If we want to get the largest boost possible from the Ayas, we have to plug it in to the primary generator.”

“…Bah. This better be fuckin’ worth it.”

Kevérin responded with silence as he looked up at the polar skies. Even in broad daylight, the polar skies of Oriciid’kas displayed fantastically colored aurorae due to the interaction of the planetary energy shielding and the planet’s own magnetic field. The sight led to the poles being highly-valued tourist destinations, but tourism had all but dried up completely in the face of Nanocreature attack. And even if citizens were willing to take trips at such a dangerous time, the CSA had shut down the poles to civilians — they now hosted only enough of a military garrison to protect the shield generators.

“…Looking at the skies?” Kaoné questioned as she slowly approached the two Chaotics.

“Mm,” Davídrius grunted, casually glancing upwards at the bright blue and green streaks through the night sky. “…I guess we at least got that goin’ for us.”

“It’s actually a point of weakness,” Kevérin muttered, “planetary shielding is always weakest over the magnetic poles due to interference from the planet’s own magnetic fields. It’s why the primary generator is built here, because if it wasn’t, then the shielding over the pole would be virtually non-existent.”

“Well thanks for ruinin’ the moment,” the Velocitechnic drawled.

“I’m just being cautious,” the Transfer Captain replied wearily. “We have to be ready for when the Nanocreatures attack. It could be at any time.”

“We’ll have at least some warning though, right?” Kaoné responded uneasily. “I mean, it’s not like they can break through the shields within minutes.”

“Not to mention they’re already spread over four planets and who knows how many more in Drakkar space,” Davídrius added.

“Not quite true…” Kevérin shook his head. “Lehmekarid fell two days ago.”

“What?!” Kaoné exclaimed, “but—! They only lasted five days! Wasn’t Lehmekarid supposed to be better reinforced than Bouy’Xis or Metorilis?”

“It was, but that didn’t stop the Nanocreatures. Dramantis will probably fall any day now, as well. So for all we know, the Nanocreatures are already on their way here, and Morcii himself could show up at a moment’s notice. We do have an Ayas here, after all.”

“Yeah, but he’d still have to break through the shields,” Davídrius pointed out. “Powerful as he is, that’ll at least take some time, won’t it?”

Kevérin paused for a moment to sigh before responding, “I hope so.”

“…How long do you think we’ll last?” Kaoné questioned quietly.

“This system has a larger garrison than any of the others that have fallen, we have a better idea of how the Nanocreatures work, and we have Ayas reinforcing the shields of both Oriciid’kas and Siionkagh,” the Transfer Captain mused. “…Assuming the Nanocreatures don’t suddenly focus all of their forces on this system, which is a distinct possibility, I think we might be able to hold out for at least several weeks. The space fleets definitely can, at least — but whether or not we hold the system relies on preventing the Nanocreatures from making Planetfall. And to do that, we have to maintain the shields, and to do that, the fleets have to somehow draw the Nanocreatures away and into empty space. That’s the hard part.”

“Can they do that?”

“That’s the big question…” Kevérin frowned and sighed wearily. “…The Genesis might be able to help. It has enough advanced tech that it might draw some attention to itself and away from the planets. The CSA might also be planning to use the non-shielded terra planets and some of the space stations as bait, as morally ambiguous as that may seem… but the thing is, we have an Ayas here. I know it’s supposed to reinforce the shields, and it certainly did — I don’t think I’ve ever heard of planetary shielding strength jumping into or above the petaton range — but we know Morcii wants the Ayas. It’s why Nikéyin made sure none of them sat on a single planet for longer than two days ever since the Nanocreatures showed up. So… it’s possible that they’ll just carve a path straight to the Ayas… straight to right here.”

“Alright.” Davídrius crossed his arms as he turned away from the window to face Kevérin straight-on. “What do we do if that happens?”

“The Genesis is orbiting Siionkagh, so we can’t count on them to save us…” Kevérin mused, “if worst comes to worst, we need to take the Ayas, engage the Chaos State so Morcii can’t steal it, and then high-tail it back to the Interstellar Gate.”

“What!?” Kaoné exclaimed, “but then you’d be leaving behind everyone on this planet! You’d doom billions of people!”

“And I’m sure billions more would be lost if the Nanocreatures got another Ayas,” the Transfer Captain countered, “I talked to Arcán about this a couple days ago, and if he’s right, then these things are far more powerful than we ever imagined. We can’t afford to lose it.”

“But we can’t afford to lose Oriciid’kas, either…”

“Alright, here’s an idea,” Davídrius cut in, “if the Ayas are as powerful as you say they are, then why the hell don’t we just fight Morcii and end it all here?”

“One Ayas isn’t enough,” Kevérin responded impatiently, “I used the First Tier Chaos State back on Earth, and while it was certainly powerful, there’s no way it’s enough to counter Morcii. We’d have to use the Third or Fourth Tier at least to stand up to him.”

“We only need one Ayas Weapon though,” Davídrius pointed out. “I think everyone’s forgettin’ about Subspatial storage, here. Y’all saw me use it back on Kotak, didn’t you? I think that could be useful!”

“What, so we can store Morcii’s luggage for him?” Kevérin snorted. “We don’t even know how to get something out of Subspace once it’s in there. And besides, the Ayas are too powerful for us to just use them as storage devices.”

“What? The fuck are you talkin’ about?” The Velocitechnic scowled. “We don’t need to know how to get shit out, gettin’ it in is all that matters.”

“Huh?…” The Transfer Captain stared at Davídrius blankly for several moments before realization slowly dawned on his features. “…Oooh, you want to Subspatially store Morcii!”

“That’d work, wouldn’t it? Stuff the bastard into who-knows-wherever-that-is and he can’t bother us anymore.”

“That might work…” Kevérin nodded in approval. “But it requires getting into a direct fight with Morcii, which we should still try to avoid.”

“We all know what happened the first time, after all…” Kaoné muttered.

“The first time we weren’t expectin’ him to pull a Dues Ex Machina out of his ass.” Davídrius rolled his eyes, and then chortled. “…Get it? ‘Cause he’s a machine, and he was claimin’ to be a god?”

Kevérin and Kaoné both gave the Velocitechnic flat stares of disapproval before the Transfer Captain turned back to the tower window. “…If it really does come down to a fight, I’ll take the Ayas and engage the Chaos State, and then I’ll try the Subspatial storage thing on Morcii. If we can’t lay a hit on him, though, then we need to get out of here. Davídrius, can you carry both of us?”

“I could barely carry both of you fatasses at once without your armor, there ain’t no way I’m doin’ it with armor. Why don’t I take the Ayas? Then I can just Subspatially store y’all and run back to the Gate easy.”

“Did you not hear me when I said that we don’t know how to retrieve objects from Subspace?” Kevérin deadpanned.

“Can’t be much harder than stickin’ ‘em in…” Davídrius frowned. “Just… think about it or somethin’, I dunno.”

“Exactly. No one knows. That’s not even considering what happens to stored objects. Do they go into stasis? Do they just float in Subspace? If you stored a person, would they get exposed to Subspace and die, or would they come out exactly as they went in? What even is Subspace? …There’s just too many things we don’t know; using Subspatial storage now is too risky.”

“…Whatever.”

“Regardless…” Kevérin sighed. “It’ll take the Nanocreatures at least a day to break through the shields, hopefully. So once they show up, we’ll still have a window to plan contingencies.”

“Now we just have to sit tight and wait for them to actually show up…” Kaoné muttered.

Davídrius scowled. “I wonder how long that’ll be. Hmph. I really don’t like the idea of stayin’ here for much longer.”

“Neither do I…” Kevérin responded, “but against the Nanocreatures… we don’t really have a choice.”


1 Day Later

“The prototype Subspace Drive has been unloaded to the research station, and the Ayas is secured in and powering Siionkagh’s planetary shield generator. We’re clear, sir.”

“Alright…” Krick leaned forward expectantly. “Finally. I never dreamt it could take so long just to drop off a couple objects… Hold position and request sitrep-level data-connection access with the CSA fleets, and query their fleet control for a formation position. Once we know what we’re doing, well… we’ll be doing that.”

After waiting for the bridge officers to acknowledge his order, Krick stood up and stretched. He then crossed his arms and glanced to his right toward a redheaded woman not much younger nor shorter than himself.

“…’We’ll be doing that?’” She echoed incredulously when she realized she had his attention.

“Don’t get flippant with me, Bourne.” Krick smirked, but quickly removed it as he sighed warily. “I hate to do this to you on your first real mission with the Genesis, Captain, but we’re fixin’ to be in a full-on engagement soon, and as the XO, you’ll have to switch out with me every twelve hours to command the ship. We could very well be here for a full week, or even longer. Understand?”

Bourne nodded. “I do, sir. But don’t worry about me; I’ve studied the Genesis’s specs, so I know how to handle the ship.”

“That’s all well and good, but you won’t really know how to handle the ship until you’re sitting in this chair right here.” Krick patted the arm of the commander’s chair. “…Though with your record, I hope you already realize that.”

“I was second just after you in the Captain candidate list for this ship.”

“Yes you were, but don’t let it get to your head. We’re about to enter battle with an enemy that even the CSA has little experience fighting, and while this ship can handle more than any other ship in its class, it is, in the end, still just a Battlecruiser. You’d do well to remember that.”

“Yes, sir.”

Krick nodded. “Good… In eight hours, you take over from me; at that point we’ll start switching every twelve until we’re no longer in a state of battle readiness. When the Nanocreatures first attack, though, I want us both on the bridge, regardless of who’s already here. I’ll take command for the first two hours of the battle while you observe, and then we’ll resume shift switches after that. But while you’re off, you need to get as much rest as possible, you hear me?”

“Yes sir, and I’d like to say the same to you.”

“Heh, I’m sure you would. Now, it’s about time you actually got that rest. We can’t afford to stand around and chat—”

“Sir! Picking up signals on the long-range sensors!”

“How many?” Krick immediately redirected his attention to the sensor readouts at the front of the bridge as he sat down in the commander’s chair. Bourne quickly moved to stand at attention by his side.

“It’s… thousands! …Incoming from Lehmekarid, but none of them match CSA, Nimalian, or Black Sun signatures!”

“So the Nanocreatures are finally here,” the Captain muttered. “Broadcast an emergency alert! Our sensor suites are more advanced than the CSA’s, they may not have picked up on the Nanocreatures yet! And prepare to engage!”

Krick sat back in his chair warily as the rest of the bridge responded with a united “Yes sir!” He continued staring at the bridge displays, his expression grim.

“…This is it.” He eventually glanced toward Bourne. “Forget what I said about the initial time line of the shifts; observe for two hours, and then replace me in nine.”

“Yes, sir, understood!”

“Good. Now keep your wits about you — we can’t afford to panic.” Krick turned back to face the bridge window and the many holographic displays in front of it. “…Because the defense of the Oriciid’kas system begins now.”

Chapter 59 – Darkness of the Known

8 Days Later

Firdia, Skydiath 17, 8034 –

Lehmekarid, Gonaan, Siionleh, Egdonikon, Bowiisen.

Citaron, Citici, Metorilis.

Tau’cen Kii, Lis’talra, Y’kisdral, Dramantis, Bouy’Xis.

Oriciid’kas.

3 civilizations, 3 Homeworlds, 14 Transpaces — all belonging to the Core Space Alliance. The three member civilizations of the CSA claim territory tens of thousands of light years across, encircling the galactic core and protecting hundreds of planets. Over a trillion people live under the CSA government. The Homeworld solar systems of Siionleh, Citici, and Y’kisdral alone host tens of billions of people, and the CSA capital world of Oriciid’kas is an economic and cultural juggernaut, featuring such grand engineering feats as terraforming almost every planet in the solar system and constructing enough space stations to allow nearly a hundred billion citizens to reside in that system alone. The Alliance has persevered throughout the millennia, standing up to such threats as the Drakkar factions all while developing their own territory and trade relations with the Nimalians, Syraus, and Black Suns. Their economic and military might is such that, between the three member nations, the CSA possesses a total of six Deathnoughts — giant warships stretching fifty kilometers from bow to stern, the man-made gods of space warfare, capable of tanking supernovas and dishing out enough firepower to obliterate planets. And that’s not even taking into account the massive space fleets of the Alliance, hosting the numbers and strategic prowess to fend off most attacks from even the technologically superior Drakkars. The CSA is truly a force to be reckoned with. And yet…

15 days ago, the Dra’kis border Transpace World of Bouy’Xis was lost.

The initial Nanocreature offensive was overwhelming. In four short days, the metallic newcomers had broken down defenses that the Drakkars had failed to penetrate over the course of thousands of years, devastating the unprepared CSA fleets as the Nanocreatures assimilated the defeated ships into their own ranks and descended upon the frightened and defenseless populace of Bouy’Xis. With the Citan border Transpace World of Metorilis and the Siion Transpace World of Gonaan also falling under Nanocreature attack, the CSA had no choice but to abandon Bouy’Xis, disconnecting its Transpace from the neighboring world of Dramantis in an attempt to slow down the Nanocreatures. But then…

10 days ago, the Siion Homeworld of Siionleh fell under attack.

Aside from being immensely powerful, the Nanocreatures were simply too fast. They had launched simultaneous offenses on Bouy’Xis, Metorilis, and Gonaan, and while the worlds were no more than fifteen thousand light years apart, the fact that they were separated by Dead Space forced the CSA to travel along the galactic arms by Transpace. And even then, the CSA’s fleets were just too slow — whereas it took CSA ships over a month to traverse fifteen thousand light years, it took the Nanocreatures a mere two days, allowing them to hit Siionleh hard before the Siions could begin bringing in reinforcements. Nevertheless, with the assistance of the local Fortress World of Tranis, the Siions put up a fierce fight for their Homeworld, determined to not lose their original home to the new galactic menace. But just as hopes were beginning to rise…

6 days ago, the Citan border Transpace World of Metorilis was lost.

After a full nine days of defending the system, the Citans had lost thousands of ships and billions of people. The Nanocreatures had managed to make Planetfall within six days of attacking the planet, and once they began attacking and assimilating civilians and military strongholds, the Citans quickly began to lose their foothold. As with Bouy’Xis, Metorilis had been attacked before the CSA realized what a threat the Nanocreatures were, and as such it was poorly fortified; in a bid to prevent future losses, the Citans decided to abandon Metorilis and pull their forces back to their Homeworld in order to set up proper defenses and come up with a solid countermeasure to the Nanocreatures. It was a decision that cost billions of lives, but the Citans hoped that they could save many more by sacrificing the system.

On the same day that Metorilis was abandoned, the Nimalians finally entered the war directly. Under Commander Nikéyin’s orders, six full fleets — each a thousand ships strong — were dispatched to assist the Siions, with two of the fleets stopping to garrison the Siion Transpace World of Egdonikon while the remaining four moved on to help the Siions defend Siionleh. Additionally, the Earthian Battlecruiser Genesis arrived at the Nimalian Homeworld, fully repaired and with several prototype Subspace Drives in tow. The Genesis was the sole non-Drakkar ship that could match the speed of the Nanocreatures, and it was quickly put to task assisting the CSA while the Nimalians researched the Subspace Drives and began attempting to mass-produce their own. And then…

4 days ago, the entire galaxy received a burst transmission from none other than Prosusicivious, the leader of the Prolatio Drakkars.

The Prolatio faction held the smallest territory in Drakkar space and were the least well-known of the six factions due to how rarely they ventured outside of their own borders. Whereas Exdominor and Surdeus appeared often enough to become immortalized in legends and stories across the galaxy, Prosusicivious was a virtually unknown name to the galactic public. So when he suddenly appeared on transmission channels the galaxy over, everyone was caught by surprise — and even more so by what he had to say:

((If you wish to defeat the Nanocreatures, you need only defeat their leader, Morcii. If you are able to take him down, then the rest shall follow.))

The fact that a Drakkar was offering advice failed to baffle no one and quickly gave rise to rumors regarding the nature of the Nanocreatures and how the Drakkars were faring. It was certainly true that the Drakkars had quickly abandoned their attacks on Siion space soon after the Nanocreatures appeared, so there was little doubt that the Nanocreatures were attacking the Drakkars and forcing their attention away from the CSA. Under that light, many found it unsurprising that a Drakkar would offer advice on how to defeat the Nanocreatures, as their downfall would be beneficial to the entire galaxy. Yet many more were confused by the utter lack of malice or condescension in Prosusicivious’s words, a stark contrast from every line of communication with the Drakkars that anyone ever knew; and even more, how could he know that stopping Morcii would stop the Nanocreatures as a whole? How could that even be true? The Drakkar’s advice spawned hope where there was none previously, but the doubt that he was wrong still lingered even in the minds of the most optimistic. Then…

3 days ago, the Siion Transpace World of Lehmekarid fell under attack.

1 day ago, the Dra’kis Transpace World of Dramantis fell under attack.

The CSA was spread thin. They had already lost two worlds and a further four, spread over tens of thousands of light years, were under heavy attack. The Nanocreatures had yet to attack any non-Transpace Worlds, but instead of relieving the CSA, this fact stressed them even more — the Nanocreatures were clearly aiming to capture every Transpace, which would force the CSA to spend months traveling distances that could have otherwise been crossed in a few days. If the CSA lost control of their Transpaces, then their ability to defend their territory would be severely hampered, allowing the Nanocreatures to run amok at their own desire. And while the Nanocreature strategy allowed the CSA to focus their entire might on defending the Transpace Worlds, it still wasn’t enough. The loss of the Transpaces was a fate that no one could allow… yet, it was a fate that appeared to be inevitable.

The Nanocreatures were nigh unstoppable, having already destroyed thousands upon thousands of ships, assimilated many more, and taken countless lives in the process. The longer and harder the CSA resisted, the stronger the Nanocreatures grew, and on top of that — whenever Morcii appeared on a battlefield, all of his opponents were doomed to death or corruption. After only twenty days and countless battle encounters, only six Chaotics remained who had entered battle with Morcii and survived to tell the tale… but even they were doubtful that they could last through a second encounter.

The only hope of defeating the Nanocreatures lay with defeating Morcii. Yet, no one alive could possibly match his absolute power. With each passing day, the galaxy’s fate grew darker, and there was little to suggest even the existence of a light at the end of the tunnel.


“I SEE YOU HAVE RE-ENABLED AUDIO COMMUNICATION.”

“Yep,” Kevérin replied, glancing back at Kievkenalis before taking a seat in front of the computer that was hooked up to Arcán’s core. “Talking like this, instead of typing, will be much easier when there’s more than two people trying to converse.”

“MORE THAN TWO?”

“I’m here, as well,” Kievkenalis spoke up. “I’m Captain Kievkenalis Yumach, of the RPF. Well… formerly of the RPF.”

“YES, I HAVE BEEN INFORMED OF RECENT EVENTS, INCLUDING THE OFFICIAL FORMATION OF THE NIMALIAN SYSTEMS DEFENSE,” Arcán responded curtly. “I DO STILL HAVE SOME RECORDS ON THE RPF THAT I SAVED DURING MY TIME IN THE HANDS OF THE SFC. IS THERE SOMETHING YOU WISH TO SPEAK TO ME ABOUT IN THAT REGARD?”

Kevérin nodded. “Not relating to the RPF, but we have some more questions for you, yes. First off, and I know I’ve asked before, but I wanted to know if you know of any way to stop the Nanocreatures. Anything would help.”

“I HAVE NOTHING MORE TO ADD, ASIDE FROM AFFIRMING PROSUSICIVIOUS’S CLAIM. MORCII AND THE AYAS HE CONTROLS ARE IMPERATIVE TO THE OPERATIONAL ABILITIES OF THE NANOCREATURES AS A WHOLE. EACH AYAS MORCII HOLDS ALLOWS HIM TO CONTROL EXPONENTIALLY MORE NANOCREATURES, AND MORCII’S VERY EXISTENCE AS THE HEAD OF THE NANOCREATURES ALLOWS THEM TO COORDINATE IN A HIGHLY EFFECTIVE MANNER.”

“Wait, so you’re saying that the Nanocreatures aren’t even close to their full potential?!” Kievkenalis exclaimed.

“THAT IS CORRECT. IF MORCII WERE TO GET HIS HANDS ON THE AYAS YOU CURRENTLY POSSESS, HE WOULD BECOME COMPLETELY UNSTOPPABLE. THE DRAKKARS AND ALDREDAS WERE ONLY ABLE TO STAND UP TO THE NANOCREATURES BECAUSE THEY WERE ABLE TO HOLD ON TO SOME OF THE AYAS; ONLY THE MORIKAI ARE EVEN REMOTELY CAPABLE OF OPPOSING THE NANOCREATURES WITH ALL THE AYAS, BUT AS YOU KNOW, MORCII WORKS FOR THE MORIKAI THEMSELVES.”

“That makes using the Ayas against Morcii sound even more dangerous,” Kevérin muttered, “if we were to lose them…”

“IT IS TRUE THAT USING THE AYAS COMES WITH DANGER, BUT IT IS ALSO TRUE THAT THE ONLY WAY TO DEFEAT MORCII IS TO USE THE AYAS AGAINST HIM. THE ONLY OBJECTS IN THIS GALAXY CAPABLE OF OPPOSING THE POWER OF A CHAOS AYAS ARE THE OTHER CHAOS AYAS. THEREFORE, THE CHAOS STATE IS AN ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY COUNTERMEASURE TO MORCII.”

“Which brings us to the other thing we wanted to talk about,” Kievkenalis cut in, “the Chaos State. What can you tell us about it?”

“…YOU ALDREDANOIDS ARE INDEED AN ODD GROUP. WHAT MAKES YOU THINK THAT ASKING THE SAME QUESTION OVER AND OVER WILL YIELD DIFFERENT ANSWERS? I BELIEVE I HAVE ALREADY SPOKEN AT LENGTH ABOUT THE CHAOS STATE.”

“That’s not entirely true,” Kevérin refuted. “When I asked you about the Chaos State, you told me how to activate it, and then deferred to Mystryth on everything else. It’s possible that Mystryth didn’t actually tell us everything you think she told us, so I want to know what you know.”

“PERCEPTIVE. VERY WELL, I WILL INDULGE YOU. YOU ALREADY KNOW HOW TO ACTIVATE AND, SUBSEQUENTLY, DEACTIVATE THE STATE, YES?”

“’Chaos State: Ordinal Tier,’ and ‘Chaos State: Disengage,’ yeah.” Kevérin nodded. “You told me that much.”

“CORRECT. OF ADDITIONAL RELEVANCE TO THE ACTIVATION OF THE STATE IS THE PROXIMITY OF THE AYAS YOU ARE USING. NO MATTER THE TIER, ALL OF THE AYAS YOU ARE USING MUST BE WITHIN TEN METERS OF YOUR CENTER OF GRAVITY.”

“Ten meters, huh?…” Kievkenalis mused, thinking back to when Kevérin activated the Chaos State on Earth. “…That was pretty close, then. The Ayas the Earthians had was almost ten meters away from us.”

“I guess we got lucky in that regard,” Kevérin replied before turning back to Arcán’s console. “I also noticed that the Ayas Weapon got a massive power boost, more so than I did. Is that actually the case, or was I just not using my own full potential?”

“WHICH AYAS WERE YOU USING?”

“Mystryth,” Kievkenalis answered after Kevérin threw him a confused glance.

“AH. YES, THE AYAS WEAPONS DO RECEIVE A SIGNIFICANT POWER BOOST IN THE CHAOS STATE — THE RANGED WEAPONS MORE SO THAN THE REST.”

“What are the Ayas Weapons?” Kievkenalis questioned, “I remember that Hastryth was a chain weapon, and that Mystryth is a bow. What’s the rest?”

“SYN IS A SCYTHE; ARCÁN, A CLAYMORE; TANIVAS, A STAFF; MATLÉS, A PAIR OF GAUNTLETS; SENDOUS, A PAIR OF CHAKRAMS; ALDRACE, A GLAIVE; AND TSERN, A SPEAR.”

Kevérin snorted in derision. “Sounds like a medieval gallery. What’s the actual benefit of using the Ayas Weapons if they’re all just melee?”

“EACH WEAPON IS CONSTRUCTED ON THE SPOT FROM CHAOS ENERGY ITSELF EACH TIME THEY ARE USED, HENCE THE SEEMING ABILITY TO SUMMON AND DISMISS THEM AT WILL. THIS ALSO MAKES THEM COMPLETELY UNBREAKABLE AND, FURTHERMORE, THEY WILL NEVER DULL. THERE IS ALSO THE SUBSPATIAL STORAGE ABILITY, WHICH I HAVE MENTIONED TO YOU BEFORE.”

“Can multiple weapons be used at the same time?”

“IF YOU POSSESS THE SKILL TO DUAL-WIELD, THEN YES. YOU WILL, OF COURSE, NEED BOTH AYAS ON YOUR PERSON. HOWEVER, USING MULTIPLE AYAS WEAPONS AT ONCE IS ONLY TRULY A BOON WHILE INHABITING THE CHAOS STATE. HIGHER TIERS BESTOW THE SKILL AND ABILITY TO NIGH-EFFORTLESSLY WIELD MULTIPLE AYAS WEAPONS AT ONCE.”

“Will the weapons even be useful at the higher tiers?” Kievkenalis questioned with a doubtful frown. “If the higher tiers are powerful enough, then it seems like they’d just render the weapons obsolete.”

“WHILE IT IS TRUE THAT THE FINAL TIER POSSESSES ENOUGH POWER TO POTENTIALLY DESTROY THE GALAXY ITSELF, THERE IS ALWAYS—”

“Whoa whoa whoa, wait, hold on a minute,” Kevérin interrupted, furrowing his brow before staring at Arcán’s console incredulously. “I almost thought that you said that the Final Tier Chaos State could destroy the whole fucking galaxy.”

“I DID INDEED SAY THAT.”

“…What?!”

“YES. FURTHERMORE, THE EIGHTH TIER IS CAPABLE OF DESTROYING SOLAR SYSTEMS, AND THE FOURTH TIER POSSESSES ENOUGH POWER TO DESTROY PLANETS. ACCORDINGLY, THE THIRD TIER AND ABOVE GRANT THE ABILITY OF UNAIDED FLIGHT, AND THE FIFTH TIER AND ABOVE GRANT THE ABILITY OF UNAIDED VACUUM SURVIVAL. SUCH IS THE POWER OF THE AYAS AND THE CHAOS STATE.”

“…We have four Ayas…” Kievkenalis muttered in awe, “…we have more than four Ayas!”

“YES, BUT KEEP IN MIND THAT EACH AYAS CAN ONLY BE USED BY A SINGLE INDIVIDUAL. IF ONE CHAOTIC USES ALL OF THE AYAS TO ENGAGE THE FINAL TIER, THEN NO OTHER CHAOTIC CAN USE THE CHAOS STATE. IT IS OFTEN MORE USEFUL TO HAVE SEVERAL CHAOTICS IN LOWER TIER CHAOS STATES THAN A SINGLE CHAOTIC IN A HIGHER TIER.”

“But still… shit,” Kevérin responded incredulously, “when Mystryth said that the Chaos State could destroy planets or solar systems, I didn’t… I never thought that we’d actually have that potential. I could just get the Ayas locations from the Commander right now and go on a planet destruction spree within the next week, do you understand how terrifying that is?!”

“Doesn’t Morcii have four Ayas?” Kievkenalis questioned, a frown rapidly forming on his features. “Doesn’t that mean…?”

“FORTUNATELY, MORCII CANNOT ACTIVATE THE CHAOS STATE. HIS… VERY NATURE PREVENTS HIM FROM ACCESSING IT, SO HE DOES NOT YET POSSESS PLANET-DESTROYING POWER — NOT ON HIS OWN. AND EVEN IF HE COULD, PURE DESTRUCTION IS NOT IN HIS NATURE. MORCII WOULD MUCH RATHER CAPTURE AND CORRUPT A PLANET AND ITS POPULACE THAN OUTRIGHT DESTROY IT.”

“Our course of action sounds rather simple then, doesn’t it?” Kevérin crossed his arms. “We use the Fourth Tier Chaos State and whoop Morcii’s ass.”

“I don’t think it’s that simple,” Kievkenalis refuted, “I trust Arcán, but we have no proof that what he’s saying is true. I doubt we’ll be able to convince Nikéyin or any of the other top brass to give us access to all the Ayas and then wave them under Morcii’s nose. It’s too risky.”

“On the other hand, it’s the only way to stop him…”

“DO NOT GET CARRIED AWAY, ALDREDANOIDS. DO NOT FORGET ABOUT THE AYAS SCATTERING FACTOR OF THE CHAOS STATE — UPON DISENGAGING IT, THE AYAS WILL SCATTER ACROSS SOME DISTANCE RELATIVE TO THE NUMBER OF AYAS USED IN THE STATE, FORCING YOU TO SEARCH FOR AND COLLECT THEM AGAIN. ENGAGING THE CHAOS STATE CAN BE A USEFUL TOOL TO KEEP THE AYAS OUT OF MORCII’S POSSESSION, AS IT ABSORBS THE AYAS INTO YOUR PERSON. BUT IF MORCII MANAGES TO ESCAPE YOUR GRASP ONCE YOU HAVE ENGAGED THE STATE, THEN THERE IS CERTAINLY THE RISK OF HIM BEATING YOU TO THE AYAS ONCE YOU DISENGAGE AND THEY SCATTER. AND SIMPLY REMAINING IN THE CHAOS STATE INDEFINITELY IS NOT POSSIBLE EITHER, AS EVENTUALLY THE STRESS PLACED ON YOUR BODY WILL KILL YOU. WHILE THE CHAOS STATE IS THE ONLY WAY TO DEFEAT MORCII FOR CERTAIN, DO NOT USE IT UNLESS YOU ARE CERTAIN YOU CAN DEFEAT HIM. UNTIL THEN, RESTRICT YOURSELVES TO USING THE FIRST TIER, AS IT IS THE ONLY TIER THAT WILL SIMPLY RETURN THE AYAS TO YOUR POSSESSION UPON DISENGAGING.”

“…Got it.” Kevérin sighed. “…Damn, this’ll take some time to sink in. Who knew we had such a trump card in our back pocket? This is just… too much.”

“This is all information that we could have used weeks ago,” Kievkenalis stated. “Why didn’t you tell us until now?”

“YOU DID NOT ASK.”

“Don’t give us that shit.” Kevérin scowled. “…Damn. Alright, I’m going to report this to Nikéyin. Maybe the research teams can verify some of it with the Ayas and come up with something before the CSA loses another world…” He turned to readdress Arcán. “You said previously that your memory banks were damaged, but you still seem to know a lot…”

“ARE YOU SUGGESTING THAT I HAVE MIS-DIAGNOSED MY OWN PROBLEM? OR ARE YOU DARING TO SUGGEST THAT I AM LYING TO YOU?”

“Well, no, but…”

“I ASSURE YOU, ALDREDANOID, THAT EVERYTHING I HAVE JUST TOLD YOU IS CORRECT INFORMATION. I ALSO ASSURE YOU THAT I HAVE NOT LIED TO YOU.”

“All we have on that is your word.”

“HAS ANYTHING I’VE SAID PREVIOUSLY BEEN PROVED INCORRECT?”

“Most of the things you’ve said haven’t even been proved correct. It goes both ways.”

“I UNDERSTAND YOUR SKEPTICISM, BUT IT IS UNNECESSARY. NEVERTHELESS, I MUST INDULGE YOU… BUT DO NOT TAKE TOO LONG TO MAKE UP YOUR MINDS, ALDREDANOIDS, AS BEFORE LONG IT MAY BECOME TOO LATE TO OPPOSE MORCII.”

“Yeah, yeah,” Kevérin muttered as he stood up and turned toward the room’s exit. “I’ll be back later with whatever we can figure out about the Ayas. Kevken, let’s go.”


“Aw, Vélunis—!”

“What?” The Lieutenant glanced lazily toward Kaoné.

“What do you mean, ‘what?’” the Materiatechnic huffed, turning her attention away from her desk computer to give Vélunis a highly ineffectual glare. “I stepped out of the room for five minutes and you somehow messed with all my stuff!”

“Suuure, just blame me right off the bat,” he drawled. “You really shouldn’t jump to conclusions, you know.”

“Yeah? Well who else would it be?”

Vélunis glanced around the Hero Machina office, which was currently inhabited by Kaoné and Vélunis alone — until the door opened a moment later as Wilkas casually strolled in.

“He wasn’t here before,” Kaoné declared adamantly when Vélunis turned back to her.

“Whoa, you don’t know that,” Wilkas immediately countered, stepping forward to stand next to Vélunis’s makeshift desk. “I was totally here earlier. I was even here before you were here.”

Vélunis smirked. “See Kaoné, you shouldn’t jump to conclusions.”

“Guys…” she groaned warily.

“Don’t blame us, we aren’t the ones who started randomly blaming people for shit.”

“But I’m not… hey, I’m trying to be serious here!”

“Well maybe you should try harder,” Wilkas replied nonchalantly.

“Aw…” Kaoné scowled, though her attempt to do so conveyed very little in the way of intimidation or irritation. “Seriously guys, we’re at work.”

“Oh, c’mon.” Vélunis rolled his eyes. “Name one time I messed with anything actually important.”

“What—! …Well, I mean, you’ve only been here for a week, so that argument doesn’t really mean anything.”

“Wow, did you hear that?” Wilkas glanced toward Vélunis as he moved over to his own desk. “She thinks we’re criminals!”

“Wow Kaoné, why are you so prejudiced?” Vélunis smirked in self-amusement. “Is it ‘cause we’re from lower tier worlds? Huh?”

“That’s not—! Argh,” Kaoné responded impatiently. “…How can the two of you be like this when the whole galaxy’s at war?”

“Meh, the galaxy’s the galaxy, and here is here.” Wilkas shrugged. “Why bother thinkin’ about it? It’s not like there’s anything we can do.”

“I guess…”

“Everyone here needs to lighten up,” Vélunis declared, “nothing’ll get done if everyone’s just depressed all the time. Hell, Davídrius was walkin’ around earlier looking all doom ‘n gloom and I swear he just about made the walls themselves start crying. Damn.”

“He’s not completely unjustified, he did just lose his home…”

“Sure, but the last thing we need around here is a depressed Velocitechnic with a hair-trigger temper. Dude needs to chill.”

“That’s easy to say…” Kaoné replied with an uneasy frown.

“Well of course it’s easy to say.” Vélunis rolled his eyes again. “Everything’s easy to say.”

“…Is this what everyone from the RPF is like?”

“Wow, did you just stereotype us?” Wilkas glanced toward Kaoné incredulously.

“No, I—! Gah, you guys are so hard to work with!”

“Whoa, Kaoné, slow down!” Vélunis threw up his hands defensively. “We’ve only known each other for a week, I don’t think we’re ready for that kind of a relationship yet.”

“What…?” The Materiatechnic stared at him blankly for several seconds before realizing the joke. She then pulled a face as she turned her attention back to her computer. “Haha, very funny.”

“Oh shit, Wilkas, she knows sarcasm!”

“Oh dude, that’s great, I heard it’s one of the highest forms of humor or something.”

Kaoné sighed warily as she shook her head, choosing to ignore Vélunis and Wilkas’s never-ending teasing as she got back to work.


“Davídrius? What are you doing here?”

“Oh, I’m sorry,” the Velocitechnic drawled, crossing his arms as he casually stepped up to the hospital bed. “I didn’t know I was interruptin’ anythin’. I can leave if you want.”

“No, no, it’s fine.” Christeané smirked weakly, craning his head slightly in an attempt to better meet Davídrius’s gaze. “I just wasn’t expecting to see you. None of the nurses told me anyone was coming.”

“Not surprised. Didn’t exactly call ahead.”

“Oh, please.” Christeané snorted, and then winced as he attempted to adjust his body brace. “We’re across the ocean from Nimaliaka. Don’t tell me you decided to run thousands of kilometers over the water on a whim or something.”

Davídrius responded with a blank stare.

“…Really? You could’ve taken a transport and been here just as fast, but you decided to run across the ocean?”

“Ocean runnin’ is actually pretty calmin’, I’ll have you know.”

“Tch. I’ll take your word for it. I bet it’s not as calming as laying on a hospital bed for weeks on end, though,” Christeané joked bitterly.

Weeks?” Davídrius echoed incredulously. “Your operations finished a week ago. You’ve only been here for one week.”

“And I will be here for several more.” Christeané scowled as he allowed his head to fall back onto his pillow. “Do you know how restrictive this brace is? I haven’t moved at all since the operations.”

“Sounds utterly terrible.”

“Don’t patronize me. Why don’t you try to take a piss when you can’t even move your body.”

Davídrius grimaced. “…I did not need that image in my head.”

“Well it’s what you get for being inconsiderate.”

“Tch,” the Velocitechnic snorted. He then glanced down at Christeané’s body brace, which held his arms fixed by his sides. “…So, uh… how did the operation go?”

“I’m still alive, in case you couldn’t tell.” Christeané smirked bitterly. “…Barely feels like that, though. I’ve been hopped up on pain meds ever since I got out, it’s what almost makes not being able to move bearable since half the time I’m too delirious to notice. Doc says my body will have adjusted to the skeletal implants by the end of next week, and a week after that it’ll be safe to start physical therapy…”

“Shit… well, ‘least it sounds like you’ll be back to normal after that, right?”

“For normal-person normal, sure. But not Chaotic normal. I mean — I’m far from the first person to have a majority-skeletal replacement, and I’m definitely not the first Chaotic to get it, but I am the first Introtechnic. Well, one of the first.”

“Oh…”

“Yeah. No one knows what the skeletal replacement will do to my ability to withstand force, because no one even knows exactly what gives a Chaotic their abilities in the first place, you know? So I might not even be able to go back to Hero Machina, or even the NSD…”

Davídrius pursed his lips before sighing wearily and crossing his arms. “Well, don’t worry. I’ll be sure to knock Morcii around for ya.”

“Can you really say that after what happened on Maasen?” Christeané raised a weary eyebrow. “I mean, just fucking look at me. What if this happens to you?”

“…”

“…That said, I’ve got a bone to pick with you. …Pun unintended.”

“Some dark humor, right there.”

“Shush. Anyways, I at least convinced one of the nurses to get me the mission reports for the two weeks I’ve been out — you know, to pass the time — and one of them wasn’t very encouraging.” He furrowed his brow before continuing, “so… Siyuakén’s dead?”

Davídrius winced visibly and immediately looked away. “…Yeah.”

“And you killed her?”

“Look, it was either that or lose her to Morcii, alright? Don’t get on my ass about this.”

“No, I’m not… I’m not saying that you’re wrong. I probably would have done the same thing. I just wanted to know why you did it.”

Why?” Davídrius bristled. “What, do you want a reason to interrogate me, too? Is ‘I didn’t wanna lose her to Morcii’ not reason enough?”

“What? No, I never said that. Why would you think that?”

“…”

“Davídrius…?”

“I had to, okay? I ain’t gonna let another one of my friends lose her mind and be forced to kill her own friends. I ain’t gonna fight one of my friends again. I don’t care what you or Rebehka or anyone says, I’m not doin’ that shit again.”

“Why are you getting so defensive all of a sudden? I never said I’d disagree, or even blame you.”

“You say that. It’s easy to say anythin’. It’s easy to do anythin’, too. Thinkin about it, though…”

Christeané narrowed his eyes. “Are you trying to say you’re having second thoughts about this?”

Davídrius sighed wearily as he glanced around the small room in search of a chair. Upon finding one, he stepped over to it and took a seat, his gaze pointedly focused away from Christeané the whole time. “…Maybe. I don’t know. I guess, less second thoughts, and more… I dunno. Regret, maybe.”

“You regret killing Siyuakén?”

“No, not— …I don’t know. I regret not bein’ able to do anythin’ about it. I coulda stopped it. It was on Sunova, you know, I think, and if I had just been payin’ attention— argh, damn it. First Selind, now you. Why’s everyone gotta get all up in my shit?”

Christeané frowned. “Because this doesn’t affect just you. Siyuakén was my friend too, you know, and the last thing I want to hear is that she died for nothing.”

“She didn’t—”

“I’m not saying that I disagree with what you did, I’m saying I have an issue with your response to it. How do you think Siyuakén would feel if she knew that you were getting all wishy-washy and hung-up over what you could have done to keep her alive?”

“…Huh?”

“You’re trivializing her death. It happened, now deal with it. Do you know how disrespectful you’re being? You of all people should know that, because you’re the one who fucking offed her. It may have been the only course of action, but doubting it now makes you little better than a murderer who kills for no reason.”

“What the hell—? You think I don’t know that? What the fuck gives you the right to say that anyway?”

“Because I’m your friend, too, and that gives me the right to call you out on your bullshit.”

“…”

“Look, do you really think Siyuakén would want to see you drowning in regret instead of tearing Morcii a new asshole in her name?”

“…No…”

“Exactly. Keep doing what you’re doing and you’re just insulting her memory and her wishes. Not to mention insulting Rebehka and her attempt to save Siyuakén, since you’re the one who told her to stop trying.”

Davídrius stared at Christeané for several moments, lips pursed, before he smirked bitterly and looked away. “Guess you’re right…” He sighed wearily. “…Shit, feelings are hard.”

“Welcome to life in the adult world,” Christeané quipped.

“Says the guy who needs a nurse’s help every time he needs to take a piss.”

“…Come two months from now, I’m going to kick your ass, got it?”

“I don’t know, might look bad if I beat up a cripple.”

“Ha!” Christeané snorted, and then returned to a neutral expression. “But really, Davídrius. I meant everything I said. Don’t forget it.”

“Yeah, yeah…” The Velocitechnic waved him off. “I know, I know. …Hope you aren’t expectin’ me to thank you, though.”

“If you thanked me then I’d really know that something’s up,” Christeané responded cheekily.

“Tch. Everyone always assumes I’m an ungrateful bastard.”

“It’s because you are an ungrateful bastard. But don’t change, it’s what we all love you for.”

“Keh—! ‘Course you’d say that. Have fun on the hospital bed while I rack up all the glory from beatin’ Morcii.”

“I’ll be sure to save a seat for when you come back in worse condition than I did.”

“Fuck you,” Davídrius responded with a smirk. He then got back to his feet and approached the room’s exit. “Anyways, I’ve spent enough time here. Should probably get back to Nimaliaka before the Commander or Kevérin throws a fit.”

“Sure thing,” Christeané replied. “Thanks for dropping by. And do us all a favor and actually figure out a way to stop Morcii, alright?”

“Aye, definitely.” Davídrius raised his right hand in a casual wave as he left the room. “We’re on it.”


“Come in!”

Nikéyin glanced away from her computer screen for just a moment as Archoné Culana stepped into her office. She quickly returned her attention to the screen and finished what she was typing as Culana silently took a seat across the desk from her.

“…Sorry, I’ve been very busy lately,” the NSD Commander apologized a moment later as she fully turned away from the computer and addressed the Archoné directly. “It’s nice to see you again, but I have to say, if I didn’t know any better I’d think you were our own Archoné due to how often I’ve seen you here in Nimaliaka.”

“I don’t think Sonwé would be very pleased to hear that,” Culana chuckled.

“He also doesn’t request an audience with me nearly as often as you do,” Nikéyin replied. “You are aware that long-distance communication technology exists, right?”

“Yes, but nothing can replicate the personal feeling of meeting in, well, person,” the Archoné countered. “Call me old-fashioned, but I would much rather speak with someone face-to-face than through a screen or an AR interface.”

“I’m surprised you have the time for all the travel that would entail.”

“I’m only the head of a single nation, Commander. You’re the one in charge of the military across the entire Nimalian Territories, and in wartime, no less. It’s no wonder you would be busy. Speaking of, how are you acclimating to the NSD?”

“I’ve had no time to acclimate at all — the Nanocreatures forced me to dive in head-long. Fortunately, Rantéin and Acknos are being extraordinarily helpful when it comes to organizing the fleets… but I doubt that’s what you’ve come here to talk about, is it?”

“Straight to business, I see.”

“I’d love to chat, Culana, really. But I don’t have that sort of time.”

“Fair enough.” The Archoné shifted in his chair to a more comfortable position before continuing, “I’m here to discuss the Quakeborn and the Chaos Ayas.”

“I’m not surprised.”

“In your possession are currently five of the Ayas, one of which is the Master Ayas itself, yes?” Culana held up his hand and began counting off on his fingers. “Syn, Aldrace, Matlés, Tanivas, and Mystryth. That leaves the Nanocreatures with Arcán, Hastryth, Sendous, and Tsern.”

“I’m sorry?”

“Each of the Ayas possess a name, Commander, and you would do well to remember them. The Ayas are more than simple generators of Chaos Energy.”

“Then what are they?”

“They are the keys to defeating Morcii and the Nanocreatures.”

Nikéyin sighed and leaned back in her chair, already exasperated at the Archoné’s speech. “I already know that the Ayas can be useful in that regard, Culana. You didn’t have to come all the way out here to tell me that.”

He shook his head.  “No, it is because you think that that I had to. You understand that the Ayas have value, but you gravely underestimate that value. To you, they are little more than tools, reserve batteries to attach to weapons and machinery in an attempt to overpower the Nanocreatures, but that is not what they are. The Ayas themselves are tied directly to Morcii, and only the Ayas themselves can stop him.”

“…Mmhmm,” Nikéyin deadpanned, “is this all in the Oraculm?”

“I would not be so sure of it if it wasn’t.”

“So you’re telling me to put the Ayas on the front lines against the greatest threat this galaxy has ever known… because a book said so?”

“The Oraculm is more than a book, Commander—”

“No, that’s exactly what it is, Culana. It’s a book. It’s a lucky book, alright, and I’ll even agree that it can seem prophetic at times, but in the end it’s just a book. Can it account for the tens of millions of lives that are lost each day against the Nanocreatures? Can it account for the fall of two Transpace Worlds? Can it account for the ever-growing fleet of Nanocreature ships that continues to attack and endanger the entire galaxy?”

“It can.”

“Culana—”

“Listen to me, Commander! I understand your reluctance to field the Ayas. I understand that you fear losing them to Morcii and allowing him to grow even more powerful. But without them, we stand no chance of victory! You read the Quakeborns’ report from their time on Earth, correct? Do you not realize the power of the Chaos State?”

“Tyrion’s feat was indeed impressive, yes, but the Nanocreatures are incomparable to a single ICBM! You read the report from Maasen, didn’t you? Then you know what Morcii can do on his own, without even trying. Hero Machina are, quite literally, the only individuals in the entire galaxy to have come face-to-face with Morcii and survive the encounter, and that’s only because of the Earthians’ beaming tech. The ‘Chaos State’ is not enough to beat the Nanocreatures.”

“And that’s where you’re wrong, Commander.” Culana shook his head again. “The Quakeborn did not survive only because of the beaming technology. They survived because they are the Quakeborn of Nimalia, and it is their fate to survive. This much, I know for certain.”

“How? How can you possibly believe that?”

“Because I have faith in the Oraculm, Commander. It has yet to fail me, and I do not doubt its words. I did not take an interest in the Quakeborn for no reason and, furthermore, it is no coincidence that they were the ones to recover every Ayas that you now possess. If you help them, they can retrieve the rest of the Ayas and stop Morcii. But if you hold them back — if you refuse to allow them to use the Ayas to their full potential — then you will doom yourself and the rest of the galaxy to a slow, hopeless death, incapable of fighting back against a force which itself has already fully grasped and embraced the power of Chaos Energy.”

Nikéyin stared at Culana silently for several moments before finally replying, “do you have anything to back up what you’re saying, besides the Oraculm?”

“I have no need. The Oraculm is more than enough.”

“No, Culana… it’s not.” The Commander sighed irately. “I can’t entrust the galaxy’s fate to claims that have no evidence to back them. We’re talking about billions, no, trillions of lives, here, all depending on me and the CSA and the Black Suns to make the right calls. Dangling the Ayas in front of the Nanocreatures like you’re suggesting is too dangerous. It’s too risky.”

“…Answer me this, Commander.” Culana leaned forward, his eyes focused directly on Nikéyin. “…Do you foresee a future on your current path? Can you possibly continue as you are and still beat back the Nanocreatures?”

“We have to,” Nikéyin declared. “I’ve had research teams working diligently on the Ayas for the past two weeks, and construction of Subspace Drives based on the Earthian prototypes began days ago. Between those and finding a way to reverse engineer the Earthians’ beaming tech, we can find a way to beat the Nanocreatures. It’ll be hard, and it’ll take time, but it’s the only sure-fire way to see the end of this.”

“That’s not entirely correct,” Culana refuted, “we will all see the end of this, one way or another. Whether or not it’s a good end is the question.” The Archoné slowly stood up and stretched as Nikéyin eyed him warily. “…Very well, Commander,” he eventually commented, “I’ve said what I have to say. It’s clear that you are convinced of your own path, and I cannot blame you for it. However, do not say I didn’t warn you. If you do not take proper advantage of the Ayas soon, then you will lose the ability to take advantage of them at all.”

“I’ll keep that in mind,” Nikéyin replied flatly, watching as the Archoné made his way toward the office door. “…I’m sorry that we can’t see eye-to-eye.”

“As am I,” Culana replied, opening the door and then suddenly stopping in his tracks to avoid running into Kevérin.

“Oh! Uh, sorry.” The Pyrotechnic quickly stepped away from the door, just as surprised to see Culana as the Archoné was to see him.

“Transfer Captain?” Nikéyin called, prompting Kevérin to turn toward the Commander. “What are you doing here?”

“We just got a message from the CSA,” he reported, “…they’re officially regrouping at and reinforcing the Oriciid’kas system, and they want our help.”

“…That’s to be expected,” the Commander responded as she eyed Kevérin wearily. “…Did they say anything else?”

“No, that’s not quite what I meant.” The Transfer Captain shook his head. “I don’t mean they want the NSD’s help — I mean, they do, but they also want our help. They asked for Hero Machina… explicitly.”

Chapter 58 – The Power of Chaos

Firdia, Skydiath 8, 8034 –

(Monday, February 10, 2110)

“Sir! Blocks 7A and 7B have been compromised! On-board security has been overridden, as well!”

“Those motherfuckers…” Krick tightly gripped the armrest of his chair as he glared up at the information on the hologram display. “I expected them to try something, but this—!”

“Suppression teams Bravo and Delta are trying to cut off the intruders, but the bulkheads won’t respond to their override codes!”

“Lockdown the beaming and weapons systems!” Krick ordered, “set the ship on a stable MEO autopilot path and then lockdown the propulsion systems as well!” He then clenched his teeth as he muttered to himself, “they somehow brought that anti-beaming tech with them… and they have override codes, too… how the hell did they get those?”

“Block 7C has been compromised!”

“They’re going for the secondary bridge! Get team Charlie over there ASAP! Under no circumstances can they be allowed control of the secondary bridge! …How the fuck did they get layout maps? Do we have a mole…? Damn it!” the Captain muttered under his breath, “Zhou had to have planned this from the start. He never wanted to keep his anti-orbital platforms, they were just a means to distract us and allow a team on the ship. Was he gunning for the Genesis this whole time?…” He scowled again before raising his voice to address the rest of the bridge. “Send a burst transmission to SERRCom HQ informing them of our situation and then shut down all non-mission critical comm transmitters! We won’t let those bastards take control of our ship! We need to put them in their place and show them that they have no business messing with SERRCom!”

Krick leaned forward warily as the rest of the bridge let out a short cheer in agreement. “Nimalians…” he muttered, “I hope you didn’t fall victim to this damned trap, too…”


“There it is!”

“The White Ayas…” Kievkenalis stepped forward, staring through a large window of protective glass into a massive chamber. Inside the chamber were a number of machines and rods, and sitting in the middle of it all was none other than the Chaos Ayas. “…Mystryth.”

“Wait, you actually remember its name?” Wilkas glanced at the Chaostechnic in surprise.

“You don’t?” Kievkenalis returned the glance.

“It’s not exactly relevant to our everyday lives,” Vélunis pointed out, “hell, I never expected to actually see one of them. Memorizing their names was just another useless piece of trivia.”

Kievkenalis grunted in response as he turned his attention back to the Ayas. The chamber behind the glass looked much like a repurposed reactor chamber, complete with blast shields and a deep cavity in the middle of the room filled with water. He casually reached forward to place his hands on the glass but withdrew them immediately in alarm. “It’s warm?”

Wilkas frowned. “That’s weird. Why’s it warm? What’s goin’ on in the chamber? If they’re just using the Ayas as a power source, then there shouldn’t be this much heat.”

“…You can’t be serious!” Kievkenalis scowled after taking several more moments to inspect the chamber. “This chamber isn’t just a repurposed reactor — it is a reactor! The Earthians just hooked the Ayas into it!”

Vélunis shook his head in disbelief. “Wow, I knew the Earthians were primitive, but are they actually that stupid?”

“Seems like it…” Kievkenalis began looking all around the chamber, inspecting every rod, wire, and machine from behind the protective glass. “Argh, they’re trying to draw power from the Ayas, but they’re doing it all wrong! There’s no energy regulation, and on top of that, they just chucked it into a reactor! The Earthians clearly have no grasp of the power of Chaos Energy, or how to properly harness it!”

“Well of course you’d say that, you’re a Chaostechnic,” Wilkas replied dismissively.

Kievkenalis glanced toward the Forcetechnic impatiently before returning his attention to the Ayas. “This makes taking the Ayas a little harder…” he muttered.

“I’m more concerned about the lack of resistance, personally,” Vélunis pointed out, “I mean, yeah, we took the elevator shaft all the way down to the bottom floor, but you’d think there’d be more guards protecting the fucking power generator.”

Wilkas shrugged. “Maybe the Earthians really are just that stupid.”

“The whole reason we’re here is to forcefully shut down the anti-orbital platforms because the owners didn’t want to,” Kievkenalis countered, “Vélunis is right. For a place they wanted to protect so badly, there wasn’t much resistance at all.”

“We should probably look around for—?!” Vélunis started, but was interrupted as the facility suddenly shuddered, the unexpected vibrations knocking the three Chaotics to the floor.

“What was that?” Wilkas questioned warily after climbing back to his feet.

Kievkenalis quickly checked the Ayas chamber again and sighed of relief when he saw no signs of damage. He then turned back to Vélunis and Wilkas. “I don’t know, but whatever it is can’t have been good. We need to get the Ayas and then get out of here, quickly.”

“That’s easy to say,” the Forcetechnic retorted as he glanced around the room. “What’re you gonna do, charge in to all that radiation, just to grab the Ayas? It’s not like you can just shut down a reactor by pressing a button, you know.”

Kievkenalis was about to respond when the ceiling directly above him collapsed. Vélunis immediately dived for the Chaostechnic, knocking him out of the way in time to avoid being crushed by a mound of collapsing metal and wires.

“You’re here!”

“Kevérin?…” Kievkenalis turned toward the metal mound confusedly just as the Pyrotechnic descended through the hole in the ceiling, using jets of flame underfoot to hold himself in the air before touching down on the ground and carefully laying Kaoné against the wall.

“…What happened?” Vélunis questioned after turning away from the unconscious Materiatechnic.

“This whole thing was a trap,” the Transfer Captain replied with a scowl, “we reached the control room, and I was able to shut down the jamming fields and contact the Earthian Battlecruiser, but something bad is going on up there. And before I could figure out what, one of the anti-orbital guns fired on the control room!” He glanced over at Kaoné warily. “…I barely reacted in time to burn a hole through the floors and all the way down here, but the impact shock still knocked her out.”

“Wait, a trap?” Wilkas responded incredulously, “what makes you say that?”

“The Captain said it himself,” Kevérin replied. “I have a really bad feeling about what’s going on with the Genesis. We need to get the Ayas and get out, now. Did you guys find it?”

Vélunis casually jerked his thumb toward the reactor chamber. “It’s in there.”

“Huh?” The Transfer Captain turned to inspect the chamber, slowly looking it over until his eyes widened in alarm. “This is a reactor?!

“Looks like it,” Kievkenalis affirmed. “It’s running hot, too. The glass is pretty warm.”

“And you guys have just been standing here, staring at it?!” Kevérin exclaimed.

“I thought our armor would provide adequate protection.”

“You mean the armor that you could feel the reactor’s heat through?!

The three Chaotics responded with sheepish silence.

“Our armor will provide some protection, sure, but if we stick around too long then we’ll start feeling the effects of radiation poisoning anyways. We need to get the Ayas and get out,” Kevérin continued as he turned toward the reactor chamber. “…We’ll have to cut down the reactor. Luckily, it’s buried in a mountain, so if anything goes wrong, well. Not a problem.” He glanced back at the other Chaotics. “Grab Kaoné and get back to the surface; I’ll take care of the reactor. If I’m fast, Chaos Armor should be plenty of protection…”

“Stop!”

“Huh?” The Transfer Captain looked back at the room’s entrance, where a group of four Earthians dressed in protective suits had entered and were now baring bladed weapons. The Pyrotechnic then glanced away dismissively as he addressed the rest of Hero Machina. “Disarm them. I’ll figure out the reactor.”

“Uh, slight problem…” Vélunis scowled. “…We can’t.”

“What—?” Kevérin responded impatiently, but stopped himself when he realized he couldn’t generate any flames. “…A CENT field?!” he exclaimed as he whipped around to face the Earthians, “you guys have a CENT field?!”

“I won’t repeat myself!” one of the Earthians repeated as he stepped ahead of the squad. “If you value your lives, then stop what you’re doing and surrender!”


“We’ve recovered all of the blocks on level 7, but the intruders managed to reach the secondary bridge!”

“What happened to Charlie team?” Krick demanded.

“They were… repulsed. Two casualties, but no deaths. The boarding team appears to have some sort of battle armor with them. Witnesses report it looks much like the armor the Nimalians were wearing…”

“…Did Zhou make a deal with the Black Suns?…” the Captain mused, “that might explain where all their tech is coming from. But the Suns are supposed to recognize only SERRCom as Earth’s representative…” He paused for another moment before raising his voice and asking, “have they activated the secondary access systems?”

“Not yet, but they got past the initial security layer immediately. They must’ve had the override codes, somehow. The only thing keeping them from activating the secondary bridge are the activation fail-safes: that this bridge, the primary one, is still intact, and—”

“And that they don’t have my personal codes,” Krick muttered. “…Alright. I hope none of you needed to use the restroom… lockdown the bridge! No one enters or leaves until this situation is resolved!”

“Yes, sir!” the rest of the bridge replied in unison as the bulkheads sealed shut. The Captain leaned forward wearily, crooking his head up to look at the various holographic displays.

“As long as I’m here and this bridge is intact, they won’t be able to seize control of the entire ship,” Krick declared, outlining the situation to his subordinates. “That means they’ll attempt one of two things: they’ll try to fool the ship’s systems into thinking that the primary bridge has been disabled, or they’ll try to brute force each system one at a time. Either will take a while, and if we keep on our toes, then we can keep it from happening at all. Understood? Don’t let your guard down!”

The Captain smiled to himself as the bridge responded again with a unified “Yes, sir!”

“Our priority is removing the intruders from the secondary bridge,” he continued, “tell the suppression teams to back off! Get them to levels 6 or 8, directly above or below the respective entrances in level 7. Vacate all bridge-airlock paths on level 7 and lock the bulkheads. Be ready to vent the halls on my command!”

“…Sir?” one of the officers turned to the Captain in confusion, “the suppression teams report that the intruders were wearing armor, so venting the level may not be enough to take care of them.”

“No, but it will limit their operating time,” Krick replied. “We can’t beam them out because of their anti-sensor tech, and the suppression teams can’t beat them in a straight fight because of their armor. Starving them out is our best bet—”

“Captain! It’s an emergency!”

“What happened?” he immediately snapped his attention to the left as another officer turned to him in a panic.

“The, the intruders have gained access to the missile control systems!”

“What?! Did I not order for the weapons to be locked down the moment they turned hostile?!”

“Yes, sir, and they were, but the intruders still managed to claim access to several of the launch silos! They’re arming missiles as we speak!”

“Well don’t just sit there, take the damned system back! Damn it! Alright, unlock the point defense subsystems and immediately fire on any missiles that leave the silos!”

“Missile launch sequence has been activated for bombardment silos one through five!” another officer shouted from across the bridge.

“Bombardment silos? Are they insane?!” Krick exclaimed, “do they mean to bombard the fucking planet?! Take down those missiles, no matter the cost!”

The Captain clenched his teeth in frustration as another display appeared amongst the already numerous holographic readouts, showing camera feeds of the five activated silos. A minute later, each silo slowly opened, followed by the internal mass drivers activating and launching the missiles out the silos. Immediately, the ship’s point defense systems locked onto the missiles and began firing, taking out two before their thrusters could activate and puncturing the fuel tank of a third just as its rockets ignited, causing an explosion that sent it spiraling out of control and into the fourth missile, destroying both.

“There’s one more!” Krick shouted, standing up without thinking. “Stop it! At all costs!”

The entire bridge remained tensely silent for several more moments before an officer slowly turned back to the Captain.

“…The missile has left fifty percent accuracy range,” he reported quietly, “and has entered the Earth misfire cone.”

“If we try to fire on it anymore we’ll just be hitting Earth ourselves…” Krick muttered, and then scowled. “…Damn it!” He slammed his fist into his chair’s armrest before falling back into the seat. “Contact SERRCom HQ and inform them of the missile. The moment we can figure out its target, transmit that as well. How long do we have until impact?”

Another holographic display appeared, this one charting the location of the Genesis in relation to Earth, as well as the location and velocity of the bombardment missile.

“We’re twenty-five thousand kilometers out, but this is a bombardment missile, so…”

“…We have an hour,” Krick commented grimly. “…We have no more than an hour.”


“Surrender!”

“Alright, come on, let’s think this through,” Kevérin responded warily as he raised his hands and turned to face the Earthians. “You may have a CENT field, somehow, but our armor still works. We’re just here for the Ayas, okay?”

The man in charge furrowed his brow in response as the three behind him glanced between each other uneasily.

“…Sergeant,” the commanding officer muttered, “…go get someone who can understand these…” He looked the Chaotics up and down, his eyes lingering on their armor. “…Aliens.”

“Wait, what?” Kievkenalis responded in confusion, “what’s to understand? We just want that white stone—!”

“No, Kevken, I think they actually, literally, can’t understand us,” Kevérin interrupted. “They must not have audio translation implants. To them, we’re just speaking gibberish.”

“That means they haven’t gone through the IID process.” Vélunis smirked. “Maybe we can scare them off with our dangerous alien diseases!”

“The whole point of us going through IID is so that we won’t have any dangerous alien diseases to spread,” Kevérin deadpanned. “Our armor shielding would prevent that anyway—”

“Silence!” the Earthian CO barked, “I know you aliens have tech that allows you to understand me. So sit there in silence until we can get someone who understands you! Got it?”

“…We can bluff it,” Wilkas remarked casually as he turned back to Kevérin. “He doesn’t have any way of proving we can understand him.”

“That doesn’t change the fact that we’re stuck here anyways,” Kievkenalis pointed out. “We still need to get the Ayas!”

“I would look for the reactor failsafe and activate it and then just snatch the Ayas out of the chamber…” the Transfer Captain grumbled as he glanced back at the Earthians, “…but I’m not sure how they’d react to that.” He sighed. “If only we had a way to draw in the Ayas from a distance.”

“…Hmm…” Kievkenalis looked back to the Ayas in contemplation. “…Huh. That’s a thought. It might actually be close enough to be drawn in by the Chaos State, but, well… hmm. No one knows how to activate it, so I guess that’s pointless to think about.”

“Wait, what—?”

“I said silence!” the Earthian demanded again, this time just as two other soldiers entered the room, both of them with guns. “Understand that your presence here can be interpreted as hostile action! We will not hesitate to shoot!”

“…You’re kidding,” Vélunis deadpanned, “are the idiots really going to open fire right outside of a reactor chamber?”

“Wait, Kevken…” Kevérin quickly turned to the Chaostechnic. “Are you sure we’re close enough to activate the Chaos State?”

“Well, I mean… maybe?” Kievkenalis shrugged. “I know there’s some minimum distance at least, and judging by your voice, we’re probably within that range… but even if we are close enough, does it matter? None of us know how to activate the state. …Wait…” He stared at Kevérin in confusion. “…Do you—?”

“We’ve given you enough warnings!” the Earthian barked, “you have one more chance! Now remain! Silent!

“…If this works,” Kevérin turned back to the rest of Hero Machina, speaking hurriedly as he stepped closer to the reactor. “…It should give us enough distraction to knock out the Earthians!”

“Wait, what are you doing—?” Wilkas started.

“Alright, that’s it!” the CO snapped, “men, open fi—!”

Chaos State: First Tier!

A burst of white light filled the room, blinding every inhabitant as the Ayas sitting within the confines of the reactor chamber spontaneously translated through space, phasing through the chamber until it reached Kevérin and disappeared into his body. He gasped and stumbled backward, but he recovered from his disorientation faster than anyone else could recover from the blinding light and stretched his arm forward. A mere moment later, every one of the Earthians’ weapons burst into flames, prompting the wielders to drop them to the floor, where they turned into molten slag on impact.

“Wha… what the hell?!” the Earthian CO stuttered, stunned by Kevérin’s show of force. “B-but, we had a CENT field!”

Not anymore, the Transfer Captain remarked as he snapped his fingers, prompting an explosion of light from the hallway behind the Earthians.

“K-Kevérin!” Kievkenalis exclaimed, “you—! You know how to activate the Chaos State?!”

Arcán told me how… The Pyrotechnic looked down at his hands, and then rubbed his throat gingerly. His voice itself hadn’t changed, but his past couple statements seemed to literally echo in the air. The effect was so subtle as to be almost imperceptible, but it lent his voice a sort of unnatural presence all the same. It… feels a lot like an Overdrive. Except… a lot more powerful. It’s hard to describe… He glanced back at the rest of Hero Machina. I’m going ahead. I’ll try to contact the Genesis and see what’s going on; the three of you should grab Kaoné and get out of here.

“What do you mean, going ahead—?” Wilkas began to ask, but by the time he finished his question Kevérin had disappeared through the ceiling, generating enough heat to vaporize everything in his path as he rocketed to the surface.

“Figures he’d leave us behind,” Vélunis snorted before turning his attention to the Earthians, who were beginning to flee the room. “…Let’s get out of here. No point in sticking around anymore.”


“The missile just passed the twenty thousand kilometer mark!”

“Do we have a heading yet?” Krick demanded.

“Factoring in current trajectory and remaining alignment correction fuel… the target is likely somewhere in North America.”

“…Would they really target one of their own cities?” the Captain muttered under his breath, “Zhou personally authorized the boarding team, so I know they’re tied to him… …is this what he was playing at all along? He didn’t want the Genesis either, he just wanted to make it look like we fired on Earth?”

“Sir! Level 7 has been completely vacated!”

“Open every bulkhead on the level! Now!” Krick barked, “suck the bastards into space!”

“Opening bulkheads! …Level venting! Oxygen levels at seventy-five percent… fifty… twenty-five… level 7 has reached vacuum status!”

“Ping level 7 for life signs as often as you can! Are the bastards still there?”

“…Only one life sign in the bridge! Only two other signs are accounted for, the remaining three were sucked into space!”

“Ha, perfect!” Krick smirked to himself. “Finally, something goes our way. Seal the bulkheads and shut all of the air vents in level 7! Maintain the vacuum state until all of the life signs have disappeared. With only one of them remaining on the secondary bridge, we can afford to wait them out. One man is nothing against an entire crew.” His smirk quickly disappeared as he turned his attention back to the screen displaying the status of the bombardment missile. “Still, I can’t trust unlocking the beaming systems. Even if it’s only one man, one man in charge of the beaming would be a disaster, which is a damned shame… we could beam the missile away, if only the ship weren’t compromised…”

The nearest bridge officers glanced at the Captain uneasily. “Sir?…”

“…Our shields can sustain a hit from a bombardment missile, right?”

“Um… yes,” one of the officers spoke up uneasily, “the exact depletion amount could vary, but the shields should be able to take it.”

“Then that’s exactly what we’re going to do,” Krick declared. “Unlock the propulsion systems and set an intercept course for that missile! I’ll be damned if we just let it hit Earth without trying to stop it!”

A moment of silence passed as the bridge officers glanced at each other in surprise and confusion; it wasn’t often that a ship would intentionally seek to be hit, much less by a high-tonnage orbital bombardment weapon. But a moment later they turned back toward Krick to offer him a curt salute and a unified response: “Yes, sir!”

Krick smirked in response. “Good! Keep a careful eye on the propulsion systems. There may only be one man left in the secondary bridge, and it may be a vacuum, but we still can’t let our guard down.”

“Sir! Incoming transmission! It’s one of the Nimalians!”

“Put them through!” The Captain leaned forward, watching the various bridge displays until the comm channel opened. “Chief Captain Krick here.”

It’s Transfer Captain Tyrion! We just retrieved the Ayas, but before we did, one of the anti-orbital cannons fired on the control room! What’s the situation up there?!

“This was all a trap,” Krick responded irately, “we were boarded by a hostile team, and they managed to hack into the weapons system long enough to fire a bombardment missile.”

A bombardment missile? As in, orbital bombardment?!

“Yes, but we’re on an intercept course. We were far enough out when the missile launched that we should be able to overtake it and absorb the blast with our own shields.”

Why not just beam it away?

The Captain glanced up at the life signs monitor and scowled when he noted that the single sign in the secondary bridge still remained. They must have atmosphereless armor. Damn! “I locked the beaming systems when we were boarded and we can’t risk unlocking them until all of the intruders are captured or eradicated. That means that we won’t be able to pick up you or your team until this has all blown over, either.”

Understood—

The rest of Kevérin’s statement was lost as the communication line suddenly filled with static, causing Krick to reflexively flinch. “What happened?” he questioned as he turned to the communications officer.

“The line is still intact…” the officer replied, “something must be interfering with it.”

“Interference… are the jamming fields still online?” Krick frowned, but his thoughts were cut short as the static slowly began to fade.

––apta–– ––ou there? Captain––? Can you hear me?

“Yes, I can hear you now,” Krick replied. “What happened? There was some strong interference there for a moment.”

It was a missile launch! A missile just launched from the base! It was huge! Ah— sending footage now!

“What?!” The Captain froze as the missile launch footage appeared amongst the many displays at the front of the bridge. “…An ICBM? They had a fucking ICBM stored there? Complete with a hidden launchpad?!” He immediately turned to the rest of the bridge. “Scan the base location around the Nimalians! Find that missile!”

“…The scanners aren’t finding anything, sir!” one of the officers replied.

What?!

It might be equipped with the jamming field tech! Kevérin exclaimed, that might explain the earlier interference!

“Damn it!” Krick scowled. “We can’t do anything if we can’t see it! …Shit, this was part of Zhou’s plan too, wasn’t it?! This missile is just to guarantee a hit somewhere on the planet. He thinks that he doesn’t even need our bombardment missile to hit anything, he can just use the fact that we launched a missile to blame us for whatever he just fucking launched on his own! There’s no way anyone would believe that, but… to actually try? Shit! Zhou, you insane bastard…!”

The bridge and the comm line fell to wary silence.

…I can stop it.

“You what?” Krick spluttered, surprised by Kevérin’s declaration. “You— …can you really do that?”

I didn’t engage the Chaos State for nothing. I have to try!

“We’re talking about what seems like an ICBM here, likely with a MIRV warhead — that is, it should be capable of hitting multiple targets. Can you really destroy that?”

I have to at least try. You said it yourself, you can’t do anything if you can’t see it— but I can.

“…Ha!” The Captain smirked despite himself. “…Very well. I’m entrusting that missile to you, Nimalian. Don’t let us down!”


The moment the comm channel closed, Kevérin rocketed into the sky, using his flame jets to propel him upwards at speeds unprecedented. But it was too little, too late — the missile had long since accelerated past his top speed and was racing ahead into the stratosphere. The Pyrotechnic attempted to follow, but the thinning atmosphere made it difficult to breath or to reliably continue his flame jets, so he was forced to fall back to lower altitudes.

I guess the legendary feats of unaided flight and vacuum survival don’t apply to the First Tier Chaos State, he muttered, his glasses visually tracking the missile as it shrunk with distance. I can’t attack it from here… so I need to intercept it when it comes back down!

Kevérin immediately took off laterally in the same direction the missile was beginning to curve toward. It soon fell out of visual range, forcing him to use his glasses’ sensors to track it, but when the missile began to level out, he quickly realized that a single major obstacle stood in his way: he was simply too slow.

I can’t even break the sound barrier! He scowled deeply. …There’s no way I can catch up to it. If only I had a weapon! If I could reliably carry people while using my flame jets in a battle scenario I could carry Vélunis up here and have him summon something anti-missile, but— wait! The Ayas weapons! …But aren’t they all melee weapons? …Damn it, it’s all I’ve got! Let’s see what weapon belongs to the White Ayas! The Transfer Captain maintained his aerial speed as he attempted to focus on the Ayas he used to enter the Chaos State and summon its weapon. This can’t be hard; if Davídrius could do it, so can I!

Mere moments later, a light appeared in Kevérin’s hand before transforming into the silhouette of a bow and then solidifying into one. The Pyrotechnic grinned, pleased to find himself with a long-range weapon — and then immediately frowned when he realized that, in the context of archery, ‘long-range’ meant little more than tens or hundreds of meters. And to shoot down that missile He glanced upwards uneasily. …I need kilometers. Hundreds of them… He then looked back at the bow, his frustration with the situation growing. What the hell am I supposed to use for arrows, anyways? Argh— useless weapon! He irately plucked at the bowstring, flinching back as an arrow appeared out of thin air the moment the string was displaced and then launched itself at the terrain below. Kevérin blinked, his expression blank as the arrow streaked through the sky and instantly hit the mountains below, impacting with a flash of light and creating a small crater visible from even several kilometers high.

Holy shit…! The Transfer Captain stared down in awe, almost forgetting to continue fueling his flame jets before correcting his flight path and returning his attention to the situation at hand. So this thing definitely has more range than an actual bow… question is, exactly what is its range… He quickly scanned the horizon before turning his attention back up to the skies. Due to its jamming field, his glasses were barely capable of tracking the missile while it flew through the high atmosphere, but his recent communication with the Genesis allowed his glasses to accurately track the Battlecruiser’s location, even in middle Earth orbit. …Little optimistic for a range test, he muttered, but he nonetheless turned the bow upwards, halting his forward momentum to instead hold himself in one place as he aimed toward the Earthian ship, bowstring stretched back to his ear. As with the earlier misfire, an arrow appeared, stretching and altering its length such that its tip was always notched, and its tail was always against the string. After making note of this fact, Kevérin returned his attention to aiming the arrow — and then fired. The arrow transformed into a streak of light, flying away with such force that the Pyrotechnic was suddenly flung downward and spent the next several seconds re-orienting himself.

“Transfer Captain!”

…You’ve gotta be kidding me, Kevérin muttered before responding to the sudden contact. Captain Krick? Is something wrong?

“Did you see anything fire down there? A gun we somehow can’t spot?”

Why? What did you see?

“…A streak of light, almost like a laser. It almost hit us. I doubt it would have done any damage if it did, but if you have any idea what it was—”

That was me.

“…It what?”

Thanks for telling me. I know exactly what I need to know! The Pyrotechnic grinned. I can take down that missile now!

“What are you—?!”

Kevérin cut the communication short and returned his attention to speeding through the air. Ha! So even if I don’t get super boosts myself, the Chaos State definitely boosts the Ayas Weapons to crazy levels of effectiveness. Hmm, now that I think about it, it must boost my ability to use the weapon as well, since there’s no way in hell I’d normally be able to aim a bow that well. Maybe the Ayas really are the answer to stopping the Nanocreatures… He glanced up again, spotting a small light in the high skies that hadn’t been there moments before. But for now… I’ve got a different target!

The Transfer Captain continued to stare at the small light as his glasses scanned it and confirmed it as rocket exhaust. That thing must be hundreds of kilometers away, but it’s already on a return path? That’s incredibly short-ranged for an ICBM… but no time to think about that! He flipped through the air, stopping his flame jets and initiating two short bursts in front of him to slow himself to a standstill before hovering in the air casually. Taking the bow in his left hand, he lifted it up toward the distant missile and drew the bowstring back, using his glasses to magnify and trace the light — until it suddenly sparked, creating enough light to reveal the missile just long enough for the Pyrotechnic to see it split into multiple pieces. It broke up…? he muttered, and then scowled. Shit — this is that MIRV thing the Captain was talking about, isn’t it?!

Without hesitating further he fired at the falling warheads, sniping two of them out of space. He immediately drew the bowstring back again, arming the bow with another arrow before firing once more and taking out three more of the warheads — the arrow merely grazed each of them, but even that was enough to obliterate them. The Pyrotechnic smirked to himself but suddenly frowned as the HUD on his glasses began to fuzz.

Even without a proper detonation, those warheads are giving off a strong enough EMP to overpower my Armor’s EM shielding?… Kevérin scowled. Just how powerful is a proper detonation, then? Hmph. Let’s not find out!

The Transfer Captain immediately notched another arrow and took careful aim before simply deciding to fire arrows from the bow as quickly as he could draw back the string. The resulting “machine gun” spray of light arrows was a messy tactic, but it worked — in no time at all he had knocked out another five warheads, leaving only two remaining. His glasses zoomed in on each individually, creating HUD elements to follow each warhead as Kevérin carefully tracked them with the bow. With another shot, he knocked out another warhead and began preparing to shoot down the final one — only for his glasses and armor to suddenly short out.

What?! Agh—! He grimaced in pain as the disabled armor weighed down on his body, its lack of power preventing it from supporting itself. The dead weight forced his arms down to his sides, causing him to drop the bow as he enveloped himself in fire, flaring the flames to high enough temperatures to expand the metal plating and tear it off of his body. As soon as all of the plating fell off, he cooled his surroundings and looked himself over with unease. …If not for the Chaos State, I would’ve just fused the underarmor to my skin… He scowled. This will be difficult to remove. …Now, for the final warhead… He turned back to the west, re-summoned the bow, and notched another arrow, preparing to track the final warhead — but froze when he noticed one crucial fact:

When he burned away his armor, he had incinerated his glasses, as well — and with them, his only method of tracking the warheads.

Fuck! he shouted irately, glaring up at the skies in a desperate attempt to locate the final warhead. I can’t even contact the Genesis now! I’m on my own… and at the worst possible time! He began machine gunning the bow again, firing off a reckless stream of arrows into the skies above in an attempt to score a lucky hit. Where is it? A missile like that would at least go above the stratosphere, wouldn’t it? Maybe I can spot it if the heat shields flare up!… There!

Sure enough, the final warhead had begun to glow a slight red due to reentry. Kevérin immediately began aiming for it and fired several arrows, only for each to miss without his glasses HUD to help perform aim correction. I can’t hit it like this…! Damn it! It’s useless without the computer corrections—! The Pyrotechnic paused as an odd sensation slowly swept across his hands, as though he were holding them over a warm stove. I’m not generating any flames from my hands, but I’m still sensing a new heat source… He glanced downward, and then back up at the glowing warhead curiously. …A new… heat source… shit, from this far away? That’s impossible—! Agh, well it can’t hurt to try! He quickly reached out with his right hand toward the warhead, dismissing the Ayas weapon as he attempted to judge the warhead’s distance through a combination of sight and heat sensing. And then, a moment later… he snapped his fingers.

Immediately, a flash of light enveloped the warhead before disappearing, leaving behind nothing that Kevérin could see from such a long distance.

The Pyrotechnic stared forward in shock before turning his attention down to his hands. …Holy shit! he exclaimed as a grin slowly spread across his face, …I did it! Shit, I actually did it! I just single-handedly stopped an ICBM!!


1 Day Later

“Do you understand the utter stupidity of the actions you have taken over the past several months, Zhou?”

Kevérin froze as soon as he stepped foot on the bridge of the Genesis. In front of him sat Captain Krick in the commanders’ chair, and in front of the Captain stood a blond-haired woman of tall stature. Both Earthians were staring forward at a video display at the front of the bridge that displayed a stout man with greying hair, a wrinkled face, and old, narrow eyes.

“…I’m afraid you have me at a disadvantage, General,” the man replied, ignoring the new bridge occupant.

“It’s time you stopped feigning ignorance,” the woman shot back, “I would have preferred continued American support for the future, but given your outrageous decision-making ability, I think forcing you completely out of the SERRCom effort will be far more beneficial for everyone involved.”

The old man frowned. “You wouldn’t dare. And even if you would, you have no proof that I am in any way related to the unfortunate events that transpired yesterday.”

“Don’t patronize me. And don’t underestimate SERRCom’s connections, either. If you truly believe that no one on Earth knows of your actions, then you are terribly mistaken.” The woman paused for a moment to sigh before continuing, “in order to protect Earth and prevent future incidents, SERRCom is ordering that you hand over the Interstellar Gate. Furthermore, you have one year to completely disarm every single nuclear warhead you own and hand them over before we move in and force you to.”

“You cannot possibly—!”

“Oh we can, Zhou, and we have the proof to get the rest of the world on our side, if need be. If you want to resist, feel free, but this isn’t the twenty-first century anymore. On the other hand… you could prevent all of this if you simply step down as President.”

“But that’s—!”

“Pick one, Zhou! Or I’ll pick for you.”

“…”

“I will send you more detailed orders tomorrow. Until then, sit tight, and do. Not. Do. Anything. This order has the weight of the General of the Space Forces behind it.” The woman nodded curtly. “Dowley out.”

The video connection cut out, at which point the entire bridge let out a collective sigh. Kevérin finally began approaching Krick and the woman called Dowley as the former turned to the latter with a smirk on his face.

“You really showed him, ma’am,” Krick commented gleefully, “I never thought I would enjoy seeing Zhou put in his place so much.”

“It needed to happen,” Dowley responded flatly. “Before, he was just jockeying for power. But the moment he put innocent lives on the line to gain that power, he had to be dealt with.” She glanced back at Krick and then to Kevérin, who stood stiffly next to the commanders’ chair. “…Excuse me,” she addressed him, “who might you be?”

“Ha, this is Transfer Captain Tyrion,” Krick answered proudly. “He’s the CO of the Nimalian team that retrieved the Ayas. He’s also the one who single-handedly stopped that missile from hitting anything.”

“Ah, I’ve heard nothing but praise about you from the Captain.” Dowley smiled warmly before saluting Kevérin. “And I must thank you, myself. As both the General of the Space Forces, and personally. Were it not for your assistance, I’m sure Earth would be descending into a massive war right now.”

“Well, uh, thanks, I mean, you’re welcome,” the Transfer Captain responded sheepishly. “But it wasn’t, well, I had some help, sort of. …A-anyways, I’m glad everything’s fine.”

“I wouldn’t say ‘fine’…” The General sighed. “…Not yet. But things are looking up. This Battlecruiser was truly a godsend; I’m not sure what we would have done without it. It may very well single-handedly carry SERRCom into the future.”

“Haha, that’s asking a lot of it,” Krick remarked.

“It might be… but the future is the future.” Dowley turned back to Kevérin. “I understand the rest of the galaxy has its own problems at the moment?”

“Um…” Kevérin replied uneasily, “the Nanocreatures are a threat to you, too…”

“Yes, but unlike the rest of the galaxy, we can’t do anything against them. We barely have a fleet, and as you’ve personally demonstrated, our defensive technology can’t even stand up to a handful of Chaotics. That’s why I’m entrusting the Genesis and its crew to you for the time being — I’m sure you Nimalians will be able to put it to far better use than we ever could.”

“I don’t think I can thank you enough,” the Transfer Captain commented. “Even the beaming systems alone could be invaluable. Between it and the Ayas, I’m sure we can find a way to stop the Nanocreatures, or at least seriously impair them.”

“I’m glad you think so, Captain.”

“I appreciate the praise you’re heaping on the Genesis,” Krick spoke up, “but I’m afraid that the intruding team did a number on the ship. We’ll need to stop for some repairs and re-staging, but after that I can set a course for Nimalia.”

“How long will that take?” Kevérin glanced toward the Captain.

“No longer than a couple days, hopefully. Don’t worry, Transfer Captain — I was there for the Maasen incident. I know what the Nanocreatures are capable of, and I won’t underestimate them. I won’t let you down. You can count on us Earthians!”

“Don’t get carried away now, Captain,” Dowley interjected, “…but that should be it for now. I’ll return to SERRCom HQ to iron out the fine details of Zhou’s situation; in the meantime, I entrust the Genesis to the two of you.” She saluted. “Good luck.”

Kevérin returned the gesture. “Thank you, ma’am. I’m sure we’ll need it.”

Chapter 57 – Guardian of the Future

Firdia, Skydiath 8, 8034 –

A cool breeze swept across the warm bricks, slowly wearing away at the heat absorbed from the now-setting sun. The day had been long, but not long enough to heat the numerous ruined structures to uncomfortable temperatures, allowing Davídrius to perch on top of a scarred building while he watched the sunset.

His gaze eventually moved away from the sun and down to the ruins surrounding him — the collapsed walls, the blasted guard towers, the pillaged homes. Bloodstains covered almost every surface in sight, the only remaining sign of the dead bodies Davídrius had buried earlier in the day. Now, his former home of Riken was but a gathering of ruins; where it was once a bastion against the terrible desert outside, it was now merely a part of the vast wastelands itself.

The Velocitechnic cast a sullen glance to the side as the sound of a motor reached his ears, but he made no further attempt to investigate. Instead he turned back to the sunset, sitting as still as the ruins around him, almost as if he were a part of them himself.

“I knew I’d find you here.”

“I thought I told you goodbye,” Davídrius replied flatly, making no attempt at eye-contact as Selind approached the short building he was sitting on.

“You never say goodbye,” she countered, “and when you do, you never mean it. That’s why you’re here.”

The Velocitechnic glanced down at her and then returned his gaze to the sunset. Selind stared at him for a few moments before sighing and leaning against the wall, electing to join Davídrius in silence and sunset observance.

“…I killed ‘em all.”

“Huh?” Selind looked up at Davídrius again.

“The Bleeders,” he responded sullenly. “I found the nearest encampments, and killed ‘em all. Not a Bleeder left standing for a few hundred kilometers in any direction.”

“Wow… impressive.”

“Yeah, but… …was it right?”

“’Right?’” Selind echoed incredulously. “You’ve killed Bleeders before. What’s different now?”

“…”

“An eye for an eye, they always say.”

“Yeah, well they also say it makes the whole world blind.”

“…It’s not like you to be all philosophical.”

“Well it’s not like me to fail so massively against the Bleeders either, yet here we are.”

Selind glanced around at the surrounding ruins. “This wasn’t your fault… You had no way of knowin’ that the Bleeders could manage such a counterattack.”

“Just like I’ve got no way of knowin’ whether random Bleeder Joe Schmoe actually joined voluntarily or was pressed into joinin’ and I killed ‘im for no reason, or like how I’ve got no way of knowin’ if I actually could’ve stopped a massive attack on Riken, or like how I’ve got no way of knowin’ if leavin’ Treséd was ever the right decision, or like how I’ve got no way of knowin’ if I made the right choice when I killed one of my friends half a week ago, or like I know anythin, really.”

“You’ve never doubted yourself before, not like this. What gives?”

The Velocitechnic gave a lofty sigh, staring out into the distance as Selind watched him warily.

“I always thought I was right,” he eventually responded, his voice low, “that, you know, that killin’ is the answer. Someone’s a threat to you or someone else, you take ‘em out. Don’t have the time to deal with all the what-ifs. Or, I guess… you could actually say that I just never thought about it in the first place. It’s easy to make decisions when you don’t think, and just react. That was before, though, before I left. Made some… I guess you could call them friends. I dunno. Feels hard saying that now, though.”

Selind frowned as Davídrius looked down at his hands.

“You’ve heard ‘bout the Nanocreatures, right? An’ all that metallic infection shit?”

“You mentioned them the last time we talked.”

“Oh. Right. Well, one of my… …one of my teammates got infected. Corrupted. Whatever you call it. Shortly after the Nanocreatures showed up and started wreakin’ havoc, she lost control of her body. Like… the corruption was takin’ over. Yeah, corruption sounds better than infection, keh. Infections don’t really make you attack your best friend against your will, do they?”

“…”

“She and her friend got locked in a fight, but I… cut the fight short. By killin’ the corrupted one. …At the time, it seemed like the right thing to do. I mean, I still think it was the right thing to do. But her friend blamed me for it, and at the time I thought she was wrong, but now that I think about it… I don’t know…”

“This…” Selind shifted uncomfortably. “…This sounds a lot like what happened with Hanas.”

Davídrius winced visibly. “I… I know. I said as much myself.”

“You know you couldn’t’ve saved her. You’d done everythin’ you were physically capable of; you would’ve had to time travel to do any more for her than you did.”

“I know that. That’s why— that’s why I regretted not killin’ her immediately, to end her misery early. That’s why I killed my recent friend so quickly.”

“Then why the hell are you doubtin’ yourself?”

“Because, I—” The Velocitechnic paused for a moment, pursing his lips as he clenched his fists. “…It was my fault she got corrupted in the first place. I mean, I didn’t know it happened when it did, but, in hindsight — if I had just been payin’ attention, if I had been a little bit faster, I could’ve stopped the damn bug, and none of this would’ve happened. She’d still be here, her friend wouldn’t be in fuckin’ jail, I wouldn’t be down here beatin’ myself up while everyone else is off on a mission to who-knows-where… Or, maybe if I hadn’t left Riken in the first place, then I’d’ve been here to protect everyone, and Hero Machina probably wouldn’t’ve been sent to that damned Earthian planet in the first place, and everyone would be fine. But instead, they’re fuckin’ dead.”

Selind sighed, moving her eyes off of Davídrius and up to the darkening sky above. “So, that’s it?”

“…‘That’s it?’” he growled, glaring down at her. “The fuck’s that supposed to mean?”

“Earlier, when you were askin’ about if killin’ was the right thing to do — were you askin’ because you were actually wonderin’ about the moral consequences of killin’ in general? Or was it because you had to kill someone who was close to you, and you’re startin’ to feel guilty about it?”

“I, I don’t…”

“I’d almost thought you’d changed, again.” She closed her eyes wearily. “…I should stop doin’ that.”

“Dammit Selind, you keep goin’ on about this ‘change’ shit but you never explain yourself. Just fuckin’ tell me already.”

“…Your problem is that you’re stuck in the past,” Selind responded quietly.

“…What?”

“You take the sayin’ ‘hindsight is 20/20’ and then run it into the ground. You act in the moment, but as soon as it’s over, you think back and find every single li’l mistake you made and every li’l thing that you could’ve done better, and then you blame yourself for the whole situation. You even blame yourself for your Dad’s death and that happened while you were bein’ fuckin’ born. It’s why you’re a terrible protector.”

“A terrible—?! I was the only fucking Chaotic in the region for years! I was the best Guardian this side of Tresnon. All the other compounds wished they could be under my protection.”

“No.” Selind shook her head. “You were a fine Guardian, but you’re a bad protector, because what you did wasn’t protection — it was retaliation. A way for you to take out your frustrations about your own short-comings on others.”

“What…?”

“You blamed yourself for your dad’s death, so you took up the role of the father figure to your siblings, even though you were still just a pup — hell, even though y’all didn’t share a dad. Then, you blamed yourself for your family’s deaths, so you took up the role of Riken’s Guardian, even though you weren’t even 10. You blamed yourself for Hanas’s loss, so you took it upon yourself to take out her controller and Strén. Then, apparently, you blamed yourself for your friend’s ‘corruption,’ so you came down here in an attempt to balance it all out by killin’ some Bleeders — and then, when you learned about Riken, you only blamed yourself again and decided to take out all of the Bleeders in the area.” Selind stepped away from the wall and turned toward Davídrius, her back to the horizon as the sun finally disappeared behind it. “Don’t you see a pattern here? Everythin’ you do is reactionary, everythin’ is based on anger or self-blame. ‘Specially recently. You said you took out all the Bleeders within a few hundred kilometers, right? You sure as hell could’ve done that a few months ago when you left, but you didn’t. The only reason you did now was ‘cause you got angry. And that’s always been the case with you. You don’t protect people, you don’t deter threats. You react to disasters, you retaliate against criminals… that ain’t protection. That’s revenge.”

Davídrius scowled and looked away in a pointed effort to ignore Selind’s gaze. “You think you’ve got me all figured out, just like that, huh?”

“You aren’t a super complicated person. …Well, not to a fellow Guardian, at least.”

“Gee, that really makes me feel better.”

“Davídrius, I’m tryin’ to help you…”

“Well maybe you should help yourself first, huh? Fix your own fuckin’ mistakes before you try fixin’ mine.”

“Look, I know… I know I’ve made mistakes. But that doesn’t mean everything I say or do is wrong. You can’t just ignore what other people say ‘cause it hurts. A little pain now is worth it if you can prevent a lot down the line, you know?”

Davídrius sighed impatiently. “I knew I shouldn’t’ve tried talkin’ to you…”

“…Is that really what you think?” Selind crossed her arms, her eyes narrowed. “I’m tryin’ to help. Do you just want me to listen to your pathetic self-doubt and nod my head in agreement?”

“As if I need your help. Or any help.”

“Cut the bullshit, Davídrius. You’re only 21, of course you need help. Everyone does.”

Davídrius glanced at Selind and then looked away dismissively. “You could really do without the holier-than-thou attitude.”

“Ha! Never could handle a woman like me, could you?” Selind smirked bitterly. “You never liked it when people disagreed with you. I guess that’s why you liked Hanas so much, huh? I bet she never refused you.”

“You take that back,” Davídrius growled, dropping from his perch on the rooftop to draw one of his sabers on Selind.

“What’re you gonna do? Kill me?”

“I—!” he started, but stopped himself and settled into a deep scowl.

“See?” Selind replied quietly, “all you can think about is revenge. Retaliation. When you were Guardian of Riken, you weren’t there to protect their future. You weren’t tryin’ to help the compound grow and thrive, not as a primary goal at least. You were there to retaliate against massacres, and that’s all. And you know what? It hurts to hear, but I bet that’s why they kept happenin’. You can’t spend your whole life reactin’ to things, sometimes you gotta go out and do things before anyone else can. You can’t just dwell on the past and blame yourself all the time, ‘cause the past can’t change. But the future can.”

Davídrius pursed his lips again, but eventually he slowly lowered his saber. “You think it’s as simple as that?” he responded flatly, “just… stop thinkin’ about the past?”

“Well, no.” She shook her head. “Obviously it ain’t that simple. For you… I’m sure it’s hard. But you aren’t just protectin’ a small compound anymore. You’re workin’ with the Nimaliakians. And based on what you’ve told me, you’re actually fightin’ those Nanocreature things. You’re fightin’ to protect the whole damn galaxy now, Davídrius, and the galaxy’s a big place. You can’t blame yourself for every failure out there, for everythin’ that you might’ve done wrong, for everythin’ that you could’ve done right. It’s too much; you’ll kill yourself.”

“Hn.”

“I admit I’ve made mistakes… mistakes that’ve forced me to stay here. I don’t know if I can ever actually leave Treséd in good conscience…” She sighed. “But you ain’t made those mistakes. Not yet. I don’t think you realize what you got, Davídrius — you have an opportunity that most Tresédians will never get, an opportunity to get off this damn rock legitimately and make a name for yourself out there. This is one of those once-in-a-lifetime opportunities, you know. Don’t waste it ‘cause you can’t get over your past.”

Davídrius stared at Selind for several moments before sighing and shifting his gaze to the horizon, and then up to the twilit sky. “…I had forgotten how wordy you can get.”

Selind smirked. “Well, that’s why I drink. I tend to get quieter when drunk. Sometimes. Really weird how that works.”

“Implyin’ that you aren’t weird by default?”

“Funny.” Selind planted her hands on her hips. “But I meant everythin’ I said, Davídrius.”

“Yeah, yeah…” He glanced away as he absentmindedly sheathed his saber. “I guess… I don’t completely regret talkin’ to you.”

“I suppose I shouldn’t expect much more from you. You should really think about it, though. You’re still young. I’d hate to see you screw this up.”

“You keep treatin’ me like I’m a kid, but you ain’t much older, you know.”

“…It sure don’t feel like I’m 23. Feel a lot older than that.”

“You almost look the part, too.”

“Hey!” She shoved Davídrius playfully. “You tryin’ to call me a hag?”

“Your words, not mine.” He smirked back, but quickly adopted a more serious expression. “You keep talkin’ like you’re stuck here, but I told you a couple days ago; it wouldn’t be hard at all for you to leave.”

“No…” Selind responded wistfully as she turned back toward the horizon. “I… can’t leave. Not yet. There’s still a couple anchors here that… that I’m not sure I can leave behind.”

“Thinkin’ about goin’ back to Austilad?”

“I dunno. Maybe. …It’d be pretty arrogant to expect him to accept me back, though.”

“Ha. Just a little bit ago, you were tellin’ me to focus more on the future, and here you are, stuck on the past yourself.”

Selind chuckled uneasily. “I never could take my own advice, could I.”

“No, you couldn’t,” Davídrius replied. “…It’s not all bad, though. We’ve all got our flaws.”

“Some broad strokes, there.”

“Yeah yeah, whatever.” The Velocitechnic shook his head as he shifted his gaze to the sky above, where the stars were just beginning to make themselves visible. Selind slowly followed suit, the two Tresédians staring upwards and taking in the dark sights in silence.

“…Hey, Selind?”

“Yeah?”

“…Thanks. For bein’ here. And listenin’.”

She glanced over at the Velocitechnic, but he continued observing the sky, either not noticing her attention or ignoring it outright.

“…Heh,” she eventually responded as she returned her eyes to the skies. “Anythin’ for a friend.”