The Obsidian Accord was not just a treaty. It was a myth, whispered through encrypted comm-channels, slipped into data fragnts encoded in forgotten languages, and referenced only in the most secure halls of interstellar diplomacy. According to legend, it predated the Celestial Council itself. It was a pact older than unity, forged during an era when star systems tore each other apart in brutal resource wars.
Now, Raidan stood on the precipice of awakening that forgotten accord.
He leaned back in his chair aboard the Silver Eidolon, his fingers steepled in front of him, the display before him filled with ancient legal code and a crumbling star map—the kind drawn before navigational AI even existed. It had taken everything to retrieve this: bribes, favors, a diversion in the orbital archives of the Polaris Syndicate, and a small war on a data pirate moon that was wiped clean before the authorities ever noticed.
But he had it now. The Obsidian Accord.
And that changed everything.
"So let get this straight," Kylara said as she paced in the command chamber, her boots echoing sharply. "You’ve found a binding interstellar treaty that the major factions swore to uphold centuries ago, and you think we can use it to..."
"Force their hands," Raidan replied smoothly. "If we bring the Accord into play, it redefines territorial trade rights, dispute resolutions, and even celestial ownership models. Everything the Starborn Consortium, Terracore, and the Sovereign Dominion are fighting over would fall under its jurisdiction."
"But it’s ancient. Dusty. Half of them probably forgot it even exists," she countered.
"That’s what makes it dangerous. And why they’ll be terrified if we wield it correctly."
Kylara stopped. Her eyes narrowed. "Then we’d need more than just proof. We’d need authority. Recognition. Enforcent."
Raidan tapped a key, and a schematic blood into the air—a floating array of planets and their historical backers. In the center pulsed one label:
The Arc Tribunal
"They were the ones who enforced the Accord," Raidan said. "And they still exist—off-grid, independent, hidden within the Void Rift."
Kylara blinked. "The Void Rift? That’s suicide."
"Not if we go prepared," Raidan said, a glimr in his eyes. "And not if we take the right offer."
anwhile, on Obelis Station...
A crackling transmission shimred across the encrypted channel in a dim-lit office carved into obsidian stone. Admiral Caine of the Sovereign Dominion watched as the ssage unfolded—a single glyph rotating slowly before him.
The Obsidian Accord.
His eyes narrowed. "So... it’s true."
Across from him, a representative of the Starborn Consortium hissed. "We had assurances it was buried."
Caine replied with icy calm. "You cannot bury a knife if it’s made of myth. We underestimated the boy."
"Raidan Kross." The na lingered like a curse.
Caine stood, pacing toward the viewing window where warships lood silently outside. "If the Accord is invoked, then even the Sovereign Dominion will be bound by its clauses. That ans the moonfields of Thalor, the gate system at ridian Delta, and even the slave trade in the Oblique Crescent—gone, overnight."
The Consortium agent folded her hands. "Then we must act first. Before he reaches the Tribunal."
Caine gave her a cold smile. "Agreed."
Back aboard the Silver Eidolon...
Raidan stood at the helm, flanked by his crew—Kylara, Threx, Lorien, and the newly arrived Varnax, an ex-diplomat who had once represented a galactic court that no longer existed.
The coordinates were set. The Void Rift lood ahead—a pocket of non-space, where reality folded in on itself, creating unpredictable gravitational storms and ti distortions. No signal could escape. No reinforcents could arrive. And no AI dared calculate a route through it. It had to be done manually.
"Do you trust this Tribunal even exists?" Threx growled, his scaled hand gripping a rail.
"I do," Raidan said. "I found three separate records, each embedded in different extinct language forms. One of them included a neural code only accessible via symbiotic consciousness."
"That’s... disturbingly specific."
Raidan smiled. "It ans the Tribunal went to extre lengths to vanish. That ans they were important. And if they’re still alive, they’ll be watching."
The ship entered the Rift. Stars vanished. Sound died. The crew tensed as the Silver Eidolon began to drift in silence, engines gliding without thrust. It was like falling sideways through ti.
A thousand images flickered at the edge of perception—mories, alternate lives, thoughts that weren’t theirs. The Void Rift was known for exposing minds to "echoes"—stray ntal impressions from parallel tilines.
Kylara gasped, gripping Raidan’s arm. "I just saw... a version of us. Married. Living on a dead planet with three suns."
Raidan blinked. "I saw that too."
They didn’t speak further. So things were better left unsaid.
Then, just as the ship began to lose power, a pulse rang out—a signal, directed only at them.
A gate ford ahead, crafted not from matter but sheer intent. Energy warped to form an arch of liquid obsidian, surrounded by spires of lightless crystal.
The Arc Tribunal awaited.
Inside the Tribunal Citadel
The halls of the Tribunal were carved from matter not recognized by any database. It humd with law, with oath, with ancient judgnt. As Raidan stepped forward, three beings rose from their thrones—each a representation of cosmic ideals: Order, Balance, and Consequence.
They did not speak with mouths.
Raidan nodded. "I do."
"I bring proof of violation from multiple parties—evidence that the Accord has been breached systematically by the Sovereign Dominion, the Starborn Consortium, and the Terracore Syndicate. I seek enforcent of the treaty, and temporary custody of its powers as Recognized Arbiter until the galaxy stabilizes."
A long silence followed. The tribunal’s thrones pulsed.
"I do."
Raidan hesitated for only a breath. "I accept."
The central figure leaned forward—light and shadow dancing across its face.
A sigil of burning onyx seared itself into the air between them, embedding itself in Raidan’s chest like a second heartbeat.
He gasped as power flowed through him—not magical, but bureaucratic. Political. The authority to challenge the trade laws of empires. The right to impose galactic sanctions. The ability to summon arbitration through celestial courts no one rembered.
He was no longer just a trader.
He was now a living treaty.
Outside the Rift, in known space...
A war fleet was assembling.
The Sovereign Dominion had no plans to honor the past. The Consortium was mobilizing black-ops units. And Terracore’s AI networks were already forging counter-legislation and fake narratives.
They had one cycle to act.
One cycle before a forgotten law changed the ga forever.
Back aboard the Silver Eidolon...
Raidan stumbled into the command deck, the sigil glowing through his shirt. The crew looked up, and silence fell.
Kylara stepped forward. "What happened?"
Raidan looked up, eyes burning with purpose.
"We just beca the most dangerous organization in the galaxy."
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