Ch-67: The Gravity-Limo
Author: Musically
last update2026-01-30 23:09:03

​The Milky Way Administrative Hub, whispered of in the rim-worlds as "The Great Ledger," did not merely orbit the dormant white dwarf at its center; it consumed the star’s very essence to fuel its bureaucracy. It was a planetary-scale construct—a skeletal ring of hyper-dense alloys and shimmering data-lattices that pulsed with the rhythmic heartbeat of a trillion transactions. To the "Owners of the Stars," the high-caste merchant kings and nebula-barons, this was the holy tabernacle of commerce
Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Ch-114: Unremarkable

    The room Dante chose was deliberately unremarkable.It contained no family crest, no glass walls, and no architectural signals of permanence. There were no portraits meant to imply lineage and no materials chosen to suggest continuity. The space held a rectangular table, neutral lighting calibrated to avoid intimacy, and three independent oversight representatives who had already stopped pretending that deference was required.That absence of ceremony was intentional. Dante had not wanted the meeting to borrow gravity from symbols. He wanted it to stand or fall on what was said inside it.The first representative spoke without preamble. “We’re not here to offer you a seat.”“Good,” Dante replied evenly. “I wouldn’t have taken it.”There was a brief pause, followed by a faint, surprised smile from the woman seated at the far end of the table. “You’re aware that declining advisory roles limits your influence.”Dante folded his hands loosely in front of him. “Influence is overrated. It e

  • Ch-113: Too Late?

    The summons did not arrive with threatening language, and that absence was precisely what made it effective.It was framed as a request for voluntary clarification, routed through legal counsel who still addressed Marena as if she belonged to a protected category rather than a scrutinized one. The phrasing was courteous, measured, and professional. It did not accuse. It did not compel. It offered an opportunity. A chance, they said, to contextualize her involvement before others did it for her.Marena read the document once without reacting. She read it a second time more carefully, tracking the placement of each word, the careful avoidance of accusation, the subtle narrowing of options disguised as openness. When she finished, she folded the paper once, precisely, and placed it on the table between herself and Elias.Elias sat across from her, already standing halfway out of his chair, as if movement alone might restore leverage.“So,” he said, gesturing toward the folded page, “this

  • Ch-112: The Briefing

    The briefing room was noticeably smaller than the council chamber, and the difference was not accidental. It had no windows, no architectural flourishes, and no symbolic weight built into its design. The walls were matte and unadorned, the lighting evenly distributed to avoid shadow. It was the kind of space designed to prevent distraction, as though neutrality could be enforced through proportion and restraint.Marena noticed who was missing as soon as she entered.There were no elders present, no ceremonial chairs set apart from the others, and no inherited authority lingering through titles or seating arrangements. The absence was not subtle. It was functional. Whatever influence lineage once carried had been excluded deliberately.A single rectangular table dominated the room. Legal observers sat along one side, their files stacked in precise alignment. Opposite them were the Vale representatives, fewer in number than they had been weeks earlier. At the far end sat several individ

  • Ch-111: Fractured Rooms

    The room did not empty when the discussion reached its natural stopping point, and that absence of closure became the first clear sign that the fracture had already occurred. The elders remained seated, their posture disciplined out of habit rather than conviction, their attention shifting uneasily from one face to another as if someone might speak up with authority if they waited long enough.In the past, meetings had ended in a specific way. Someone had always summarized, assigned follow-ups, or invoked a precedent. This time, none of that happened. The structure that once governed their interactions loosened, leaving them suspended in a moment that no longer responded to ritual.Marena and Dante moved toward the window without asking for acknowledgment. No one stopped them, but no one invited the movement either. The city beyond the glass spread out in reflective layers—rain-darkened streets, traffic bleeding red and white into the pavement, buildings lit unevenly by offices that

  • Ch-110:Question Asked Too Late

    It wasn't technically a meeting, because meetings implied preparation, structure, and an outcome that could be guided. What they convened instead was described as a conversation, a term families like the Vales used when they wanted the appearance of informality without relinquishing control. In practice, it meant that no aides were present to document concessions, no fixers were nearby to intervene if tempers rose, and no donors waited in adjacent rooms to remind everyone of leverage still held. The absence was deliberate. So was the setting.The remaining elders gathered in the smaller sitting chamber overlooking the inner courtyard, a space traditionally reserved for inheritance negotiations, closed-door reconciliations, and the early planning stages of funerals. The room carried the weight of endings disguised as continuity, and every person seated there was aware of the symbolism even if none chose to acknowledge it aloud.Marena sat to one side of the room, positioned just outsid

  • Ch-109: When One House Falls

    The collapse did not begin with sirens or press conferences, nor did it announce itself through emergency broadcasts or hurried official addresses. It began in the quieter way these events always did, through resignation letters prepared by legal counsel instead of handwritten apologies, through public statements that cited “personal considerations” and “health-related decisions,” and through a conspicuous absence of denial where denial had once been reflexive.Silence, in this case, was not restraint. It was concession.By midmorning, every major network had converged on the same framing, not because of coordination but because there was no other version of events that could still plausibly hold.LEGACY BOARD IN FREEFALL AFTER INTERNAL LEAKSThe banner repeated itself across screens, identical in substance even as anchors changed, studios rotated, and commentators layered speculation on top of what were already verified facts.The name attached to the collapse was not the Vale family

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App