Aboard the Starpiercer, silence lingered like a fog.
Jiang Chen stood before a vast holographic projection in the strategy chamber, its translucent blue interface depicting the known regions of the Serpentine Sector. The map pulsed with life: trade routes blinked in red, green for allied systems, and a growing swath of yellow that marked the territories influenced by the newly ergent Tri-Spiral Consortium—an organization cloaked in neutrality, yet quietly amassing power.
"Double-check that shipping lane near the Halcyon Drift," he said to Lira, who stood beside him. "They've rerouted two convoys in the last five days. That slls like blockade maneuvering."
"They're dancing too carefully to be random," Lira replied, fingers swiping through projections. "Tri-Spiral's not just building an economy—they're choking anyone who won't sell through them."
Jiang Chen narrowed his eyes. "Then it's ti to pull the veil off their little masquerade."
The Catalyst
The Tri-Spiral Consortium had erged months ago, presenting itself as a "neutral arbitrator of interstellar comrce," assisting small systems to negotiate better deals against hegemonies. But Jiang Chen had seen through the facade from the beginning. The data didn't lie: every 'assisted' system lost autonomy within weeks, bound by predatory clauses hidden in trade codes that only the Exchange's decoding engine could uncover.
Their latest target? The sovereign system of Ayreth—a once-proud banking dynasty turned desperate after decades of resource depletion.
"I received their reply," Vanna said, stepping into the chamber with a datapad. "Ayreth's Grand Archivist accepted Tri-Spiral's arbitration offer… and declined ours."
Jiang Chen's expression didn't flinch. "What terms did Tri-Spiral offer?"
"Debt restructuring via bonded loan artifacts from the Draak Coalition. Collateralized against planetary atmosphere rights."
Lira cursed under her breath. "They're selling air now?"
"They're selling desperation," Jiang Chen said grimly. "And they're doing it faster than we're intercepting."
A Dangerous Move
"We can't strong-arm Ayreth without proving corruption," Marshal Orin said during the senior council eting later that cycle. "They're already wary of monopolies. If we act rashly, we'll look like another dominator."
"I don't intend to strong-arm anyone," Jiang Chen replied. "I intend to outplay them."
He paced slowly before the gathered team—Orin, Vanna, Lira, Captain Sarei, and several representatives from frontier guilds. "Tri-Spiral is hiding behind arbitration and legalese, but they've left fingerprints. If we can intercept their bonded artifacts before activation and reveal their true nature, we can break their montum without a single cannon fired."
"Intercept where?" asked Sarei. "They're shipping through covert relays, and their rchant IDs are layered behind triple encryption."
"We won't intercept their convoys," Jiang Chen said. "We'll intercept their source."
He tapped a location on the galactic map—an obscure moon orbiting the dead world of Cindrelis.
"Three weeks ago, a ping ca from that rock. A pulse artifact transmission only found in high-value economic deals. One of our passive satellites caught it by accident."
"What's there?" Vanna asked.
"An unregistered station. Likely where Tri-Spiral is crafting their contracts and artifacts. If we expose it, we destroy their leverage."
Moonlight Intrusion
Three days later, under a cloak of radiation shadows, the Starpiercer entered the Cindrelis moon's orbit.
The unregistered station ca into view—jagged and incomplete, half buried in moon dust and craters, its angular architecture glowing faintly beneath polarized shields. Scans showed almost no active life signs. Only machinery pulsing in rhythmic patterns.
"This is a ghost station," Captain Sarei muttered. "Barely any defense systems. Either they're hiding sothing massive—or it's a decoy."
"Doesn't matter," Jiang Chen said. "We're going in."
Lira, Orin, and a strike team boarded with him. The interior of the station was dark, save for pulsing blue conduits lining the walls. Massive servers humd inside sealed cores, each one running on cryptic Tri-Spiral algorithms. The walls bore no sigils or nas—only serial codes and digital glyphs.
"Found sothing," Orin said, brushing dust from a wall panel. "Encrypted trade logs. But… these aren't just loan bonds."
Jiang Chen stepped beside him, eyes narrowing as the translation engine kicked in.
[BOND ARTIFACT: BETA-CARMIN. CLASS: SOUL-LINKED DEBT.][COLLATERAL: SOVEREIGN WILL. FAILURE PENALTY: AUTOMATED SYSTEM OVERRIDE.][ASSIGNEE: AYRETH COUNCIL, ARTICLE 7.3]
Jiang Chen's jaw tightened. "They're using bound consciousness contracts. These aren't just economic. They enslave decision-making itself."
Lira paled. "You an… Ayreth's ruling class would lose autonomy. Their very thoughts… dictated by Tri-Spiral?"
"Worse. Tri-Spiral can implant directives and override rebellion. The mont these artifacts activate, Ayreth becos a puppet."
The Gamble of Revelation
Back aboard the Starpiercer, Jiang Chen ordered a full data extraction. They had enough evidence to bring the entire Tri-Spiral sche into question. But they couldn't just upload it to the Exchange—Tri-Spiral's PR influence ran deep.
"We'll hold a public auction," he declared.
Everyone turned to him.
"An auction?" Vanna blinked. "For what, exactly?"
"For Tri-Spiral's truth."
He elaborated. "We'll simulate an open trade auction on a neutral planet—like Elyth Pri. Then, during the peak bidding, we'll leak the data as a 'product reveal.' Let the whole sector see their tactics firsthand. With enough eyes on them, even Tri-Spiral won't be able to spin it."
"It'll be risky," Orin warned. "They'll send agents. Maybe even attempt sabotage."
"Let them," Jiang Chen said. "We'll trade truth for trust. And once that trust is earned, no consortium can stop the Exchange."
Auction of Shadows
A week later, the Grand Pavilion of Elyth Pri buzzed with tension. Guild leaders, sector brokers, planetary governors, and economic warlords gathered under the pretense of a once-in-a-century auction for a "revolutionary trade paradigm."
The stage shimred with lights. The crowd didn't yet know what they were here for—but the invitation bore Jiang Chen's seal, and his reputation alone commanded reverence.
Jiang Chen stepped into the center, robes dark as voidglass, eyes calm.
"Friends," he began, voice echoing across the dod chamber. "Today, I auction not artifacts, nor ships, nor riches. I auction awareness."
A low murmur spread.
He raised a hand. "Let show you what lies beneath the gold."
With a gesture, the central holoscreen activated—projecting the Tri-Spiral station's interior, the artifact logs, and the decoded contracts. An AI narration guided the audience through each clause, revealing how sovereignty, willpower, and even planetary weather systems were being collateralized.
By the end, the room was silent.
Then—
"Is this true?" a Selesian banker gasped. "These terms… they violated ten articles of interstellar code."
A governor from Ayreth paled. "We were hours from signing our final contract…"
"Tri-Spiral," Jiang Chen said, "is not your savior. They are your silent conqueror."
Storms in the Aftermath
As the broadcast echoed across the sector, Tri-Spiral's spokespeople scrambled to respond. But the damage was done.
Within hours:
Ayreth rescinded all deals with Tri-Spiral.
Twelve mid-tier systems canceled their arbitration agreents.
The Central Comrce Alliance launched an investigation.
And Jiang Chen received encrypted ssages from five outer-rim planets requesting direct alliance with the Galactic Exchange.
Back on the Starpiercer, Vanna smiled as new trade requests flooded the Exchange's system. "They're coming to us in waves. You may have just turned the tide of a whole sector."
"I didn't just want to stop Tri-Spiral," Jiang Chen said quietly. "I wanted to remind everyone that trust is a currency too. And I trade in nothing less than sovereignty."
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