
The weight of the Vanguard armor was never just about the tungsten-weave plates or the micro-fusion battery humming against my spine. It was the weight of the lies.
For twelve years, I wore that suit like a second skin. I looked in the mirror and saw a savior, a guardian of the Alliance, the tip of the spear that kept the outer rim from falling into chaos. They told us the colonies were lawless, that the corporate syndicates were the only thing keeping humanity from tearing itself apart at the edges of the galaxy. They told us we were the peacekeepers.
Then came New Carthage.
The hangar bay of the Titan’s Will was freezing, the air tasting of ozone and recycled sweat. Around me, thirty men and women of the Seventh Vanguard Vanguard stood like statues of matte-black steel. My squad. The people who had saved my life a hundred times over, and whose lives I held in the palm of my gauntleted hand.
Commander Vance’s voice had come through the comm-link, cold and flat, stripped of any human warmth. "Captain Peter. The colony has refused the extraction quota for the third consecutive cycle. They are harboring subversives. Purge the sector. Leave no infrastructure intact."
I remember looking through my HUD at the thermal scans of the colony below us. It wasn't a fortress. It wasn't an army base. It was a terraforming outpost. Those thermal signatures weren't soldiers holding plasma rifles; they were families huddled around heat regulators, children sleeping in bunk beds carved into the Martian rock.
"Sir," I had said, my voice echoing in my own helmet. "The scans show ninety percent civilian density. There are no weapon emplacements. Requesting permission to deploy ground forces for a tactical arrest instead of an orbital strike."
"Request denied, Captain. Execute the purge."
I didn't press the button. I looked at my squad, saw the hesitation in their postures, and I knew we had crossed a line that no soldier could ever walk back from. I locked the targeting system, overrode the automated fire sequence, and broadcasted a warning to the colony below to evacuate.
That was my crime. Mercy.
The retaliation was instant. Vance didn't just abort the mission; he labeled us rogue. The ship’s automated defense turrets inside the hangar turned on us before we could even disembark. The memory was a blur of explosive decompression, the screaming of metal tearing apart, and the blinding flashes of point-defense cannons firing at point-blank range. I watched my squad, my family, ripped to shreds by the very ship we called home.
A heavy blast caught me dead in the chest, shattering my outer plating and throwing me backward into the vacuum of space through the breached hangar doors.
As I drifted away into the black, watching the Titan’s Will shrink into a distant speck of malicious light, my oxygen level ticked down. The universe grew quiet. Cold. I should have died out there, just another piece of space junk orbiting a forgotten rock.
But anger is a funny thing. It keeps the blood pumping when the heart wants to quit.
Now, six months later, I am standing in the shadows of the lower maintenance docks of the Core Station, looking up at the Ares Prime.
It is the Alliance’s newest flagship prototype, a dreadnought designed to police the galaxy with an iron fist. It is sleek, terrifying, and completely automated save for a skeleton crew of elite officers. And tonight, it belongs to me.
Beside me, Jaxx adjusted his optical visor, his mechanical fingers clicking against his cybernetic thigh. He was a discard, a scavenger from the lower rings who hated the Alliance even more than I did. "The security grid is cycling in thirty seconds, Peter. If we miss this window, the automated turrets will turn us into Swiss cheese before we hit the airlock."
"Then don't miss the window," I said, checking the power cell on my sidearm. It wasn't Vanguard issue, just a heavily modified plasma pistol I’d scraped together from salvage parts but it would do the job.
To my left, Lyra was already tapping furiously into a stolen datapad, her face illuminated by the pale blue glow of the screen. She was a disgraced Alliance tech-officer who had chosen exile over complicity. "Encryption bypassed. Secondary venting shafts are open. We have exactly four minutes before the internal sensors register the pressure drop."
"Move out," I ordered.
We slipped through the service hatch like ghosts. The interior of the Ares Prime smelled of pristine, untouched machinery. It lacked the grime and rust of the freighter ships I’d spent the last half-year hiding on. This was the belly of the beast, clean, clinical, and deadly.
We moved in a tight stack down the primary maintenance corridor. My boots made no sound on the deck plating; I had spent weeks modifying our gear to damp acoustic vibrations. We were outnumbered a hundred to one, but we had the element of surprise, and more importantly, I knew the architectural layout of Alliance warships better than I knew my own face.
"Bridge is two levels up," Lyra whispered over the localized short-range comms. "But Peter, we have a problem. The central AI is already online. It’s monitoring biological signatures. It knows we’re here, it just hasn’t categorized us as hostile yet. It thinks we’re a maintenance crew."
"Then we don't give it a reason to change its mind," I said, picking up the pace.
We reached the primary grav-lift. As the doors slid open, two Alliance security officers stepped out. They wore the standard blue-and-silver armor, their rifles slung casually over their shoulders. They weren't expecting trouble in the heart of the secure sector.
Before they could even register the grim, unpainted armor I wore, I closed the distance.
I grabbed the first guard by his throat-piece, slamming him against the bulkhead with enough force to dent the metal. My fist connected with the second guard’s visor, shattering the reinforced glass and sending him dropping to the floor in a heap. The first guard groaned, reaching for his sidearm, but I twisted his wrist until the bone popped, disarming him and dropping him beside his partner.
Jaxx quickly dragged their bodies into the lift, stripping them of their keycards. "Clean," he muttered, wiping a drop of blood from his metal knuckles. "But the AI definitely noticed that spike in heart rates."
"We’re out of time for subtlety anyway," I said, stepping into the lift and slamming the button for the bridge.
The elevator climbed rapidly, the hum of the ship’s sub-light engines vibrating through the soles of my boots. I could feel the familiar adrenaline coursing through my veins, the icy clarity that used to make me the Alliance's most effective weapon.
The lift doors chimed and slid open.
The bridge of the Ares Prime was vast, a panoramic viewport revealing the glittering expanse of the Core Station outside. At the center stood Admiral Vance.
He hadn't changed. Still the same pristine uniform, the same arrogant posture, looking out over his domain like a god surveying his creation. He turned slowly, expecting a report, but his eyes widened as they locked onto me.
"Peter," he whispered, the name tasting like poison on his tongue. "You're dead."
"I was," I said, raising my pistol and aiming it squarely at his chest. "But I got better. And now, I’m taking your ship."
Latest Chapter
Price of Freedom
The air inside the station’s council chamber was thick with smoke and the metallic tang of unwashed recyclers. It was a massive, circular room built into the hollowed-out core of the asteroid itself, with jagged rock walls casting heavy shadows over a polished obsidian table. Around it sat the leaders of the Haven Sector, a grim collection of cartel bosses, corporate defectors, and pirate kings who ruled this lawless stretch of space through sheer terror and deep pockets.Kael took his seat at the center of the table, his four cybernetic eyes whirring as he gestured to the empty space across from him. Jaxx stood right behind me, his mechanical arm holding the half-conscious Admiral Vance like a shield. The room was lined with heavily armed guards, their fingers twitching on the triggers of their kinetic rifles.A massive, scarred human with a cybernetic jaw spat onto the floor, glaring at me. "We’ve seen the news feeds from the Core, Vanguard. The Alliance has put a bounty on your hea
The Lion's Den
The radio went dead silent for five agonizing seconds. On the tactical display, three independent defense platforms orbiting the station slowly rotated their massive kinetic batteries, locking onto our coordinates. We were a wolf in a shepherd’s field, but we were a wolf bleeding out from every major artery."Say again, Independent," the station controller’s voice returned, the previous gruffness replaced by a sharp, calculating intensity. "Did you say you have an Alliance Admiral in your brig?""You heard me, Control," I said, leaning over the console. "I have Admiral Vance, commander of the Third Fleet. And I have an Alliance prototype dreadnought that needs an engineering bay before its power grid melts. Let us dock, and we can discuss how much his freedom or his head is worth to your syndicates."A long pause stretched over the comm-link. Through the viewport, I watched the defensive platforms hold their fire, their turrets remaining stationary but dangerously alert."Bridge forty
The Tearing Point
The green plasma bolts from the interceptor ripped through the dark, striking the very edge of our stern. Even with the primary grid active, our shields were only half-formed, a patchwork matrix of energy that buckled instantly under the impact. The bridge erupted into a frenzy of sparks, a primary console to my left exploding in a shower of white-hot glass and melting copper.The gravity on the bridge failed for a terrifying, split second, lifting my feet off the deck before the emergency gyros slammed us back down with a brutal, bone-crushing force."Hyperdrive engaged!" Lyra screamed as she barreled through the bridge doors, throwing herself into her seat and grabbing the master levers.The universe outside didn't shift smoothly into the familiar, clean tunnel of FTL travel. Because of the unstable Model-Four relays humped into our high-tech engine grid, the jump was a violent, screaming nightmare. The stars didn't stretch; they fractured into jagged shards of blinding light. The s
The Hunting Party
The transition from the dead silence of the Iron Sovereign back into the pressurized airlock of the Ares Prime was a blur of adrenaline and cold sweat. The moment the inner doors hissed open, Jaxx and I ripped off our helmets, the metallic taste of recycled oxygen giving way to the sharp smell of hot electronics and burning insulation that still lingered in our own corridors.I didn't wait to unstrap my armor. I grabbed the heavy salvage pack containing the three alloy relays and sprinted down the corridor toward the bridge, my heavy boots clanging rhythmically against the deck plates. Jaxx followed closely behind, his face grim, his broken environmental suit dripping condensed moisture onto the floor.When I burst onto the bridge, the scene was bathed in a chaotic crimson glow. The emergency lights were pulsing faster now, a visual heartbeat of a ship on the verge of collapse. Lyra was practically buried in her console, her fingers moving across the glass interface with frantic despe
Ghosts in the Gear
The zero-gravity vault transformed into a chaotic arena of flying metal and blinding energy. The machine moved with a terrifying, jerky speed, its heavy iron limbs clawing across the ceiling and bulkheads as if gravity were merely a suggestion. It ignored the vacuum, driven entirely by an ancient, unyielding command to destroy intruders."Scatter!" I yelled, kicking off the engineering console just as the drone’s massive kinetic drill slammed into the metal where I had been standing a second prior.The impact tore the heavy distribution hub completely off its mountings, sending a cloud of shattered copper wires and ancient insulation drifting into the room. I floated backward, my boots searching for a solid surface, while my hands scrambled to pull the plasma pistol from my holster. I lined up a shot and fired three consecutive rounds directly at the drone's rotating optical sensor.The plasma bolts struck the machine's headpiece, melting the protective casing and causing the crimson
Into the Sovereign
Chapter 5 Into the SovereignThe silence of the void was absolute, broken only by the sound of my own breathing echoing inside my helmet. I hauled myself along the mechanical tether, my gloved hands gripping the braided steel line as the massive, ruined hull of the Iron Sovereign loomed larger with every pull. Up close, the ancient carrier looked less like a ship and more like a floating mountain of jagged metal, its armor plating peeled back in great, rusted ribbons from explosions that had cooled half a century ago.Behind me, Jaxx kicked off from the airlock of the Ares Prime, his heavy cybernetic frame moving with surprising grace across the line. His rifle was slung tightly across his back, the magnetized locking mechanism keeping it secure against his environment suit."Keep your eyes open, Peter," Lyra’s voice crackled through the short-range comms, accompanied by a heavy layer of static from the background radiation of the debris field. "I’m tracking your telemetry, but the cl
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