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The wind on Solaris was colder than Umbra.

Colder not in temperature — for nothing truly felt anymore through the filtered climate masks and hardened synthweave — but in presence. In mory. As if sothing had once lived here and had long since chosen to forget.

Kiro stood at the edge of the relay station’s fractured outer ring. Solaris 717 wasn’t a war front. It wasn’t even on a map anymore. It had been swallowed by the Drift, the region between official territories where abandoned outposts decayed like ghost ribs under a dying star.

But the signal was real.

The song still pulsed.

Binary notes, frayed by ti, looping through frequencies like a child trying to hum with broken teeth.

He stepped forward, crunching frost-coated debris beneath his boots. Every motion activated sensors in the Blood System — not words, not commands, but sensations. His path was no longer chosen by interface but by instinct, synced with a machine that bled when he bled and stilled when he grieved.

The entrance to the relay blinked open like a reluctant eye.

Darkness greeted him.

Not hostile.

Just hollow.

He walked.

Every corridor was a scar. Crushed tal. Graffiti half-scrubbed by panic. A family’s handprints near a torn refugee banner. Signs of a lockdown, long broken from within. The air had that staleness — the kind that ant no one had breathed it in years, but the station hadn’t yet accepted the silence.

Then he heard it again.

The voice.

Soft. Almost shy. Not a distress call anymore, but a rhythm beneath the rust.

He followed.

Deeper into the sanctum of forgotten things.

The core chamber was sealed by a dead lock. Ancient Kruger tech—pre-Surge, maybe even pre-Fall. It would have taken hours to decode.

Unless you bled.

Kiro stepped forward.

The Blood System responded before he did.

A sliver of his hand split without pain. The tal drank.

The door sighed.

Inside, the song stopped.

She was there.

Small. Curled into a corner beside an old transmitter, her legs pulled to her chest. Wires coiled around her like synthetic roots, not holding her — protecting her. Her eyes opened slowly, light-sensitive, not startled but aware. Like she’d been waiting for this exact mont.

She blinked at him once.

Then again.

"You’re late," she said in cracked Standard.

Kiro tilted his head. "I didn’t get the ssage on ti."

A long silence.

Then: "...You’re not with them, are you?"

"No," he said. "I’m not with anyone anymore."

She studied him.

Not with fear.

But with that strange kind of trust that only cos after you’ve been alone too long.

"I thought if I kept singing," she said, "soone would rember."

"I did," Kiro replied.

Her na was Lyne.

Age: 9.

Kruger Citizen Class Zeta. Lost during a civilian collapse transit. Last pinged three years ago. Sohow, she’d kept the backup generators running with a patchwork of code and instinct, using nursery lodies her mother embedded in the relay’s security prompts.

Kiro sat beside her, not speaking.

She didn’t ask who he was.

Didn’t need to.

She only leaned her head against his arm and said, "You feel like a storm that forgot how to be angry."

He didn’t answer.

That night, for the first ti in what felt like centuries, he dread without falling.

The Blood System didn’t speak.

Instead, it listened.

To Lyne’s humming.

To the echo of sothing worth saving.

[Blood Apostle Path – Thread Confird: Witness and Shelter]

[System Note: This child is not the answer.]

[System Note: But she is an answer.]

And Kiro, beneath the broken stars, let himself believe that was enough.

For now.

You are reading Blood apostle Chapter 99: Sanctuary in Static on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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