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She walked up to the side of the ship, not hurrying, not dragging her feet either. Just a steady pace.

Close enough now that she could see the faint outline of her own face reflected in the dull matte surface of the hull.

It wasn’t the type of ship built to fight in open skies. No thick plating. No weapon ports. No war paint, and it definitely wasn’t built to haul colonists or cargo across regulated space.

This wasn’t a warship.

And it wasn’t a carrier.

It was sothing in between—or maybe sothing else entirely.

A shape made to move through the dark places. Slip past scanners. Bypass checkpoints.

Its silhouette was narrow, curved where it needed to be, smooth in places most ships wouldn’t bother. It didn’t scream power, instead it whispered a possibility.

She reached out and let her palm rest flat on the nose of the ship, the tal cool beneath her glove.

Not as a gesture of pride or ownership. There wasn’t any pride in this—not anymore. It was a weight—a silent reminder of why she had started building these in the first place.

There was a ti when mobility had ant freedom. Escape. An open sky. But that wasn’t what this was about anymore. This wasn’t about running.

It was about deciding—who got to leave, who had to stay behind, and who had the guts to step into the parts of the map people had stopped looking at.

A technician stood nearby, quiet until now. He glanced between her and the ship, eyes uncertain but not fearful.

He finally asked, his voice low and calm, like he already knew the answer but felt he had to ask anyway: " Are you planning to deploy past the sanctioned zones?"

She didn’t turn around. Just kept looking at the ship.

"If I weren’t," she said, tone flat, "I wouldn’t be building them myself."

He gave a small nod. Nothing else needed to be said.

A mont later, her assistant walked up, tablet in hand. There was no rush in her steps—just quiet efficiency.

This is the pace people used when they knew there was work ahead but nothing left to argue about.

"The other buyouts?" the assistant asked.

"Two confird," the woman replied. "Last one’s still dragging their feet."

Seraphina didn’t even blink. "Push their liquidity reports to the regulators."

The assistant hesitated—not long, just a beat—but she nodded. "Yes, ma’am."

"Then prep a press draft," Seraphina continued. "We’re announcing that the Nocturne Group is officially expanding into orbital systems engineering."

The assistant tilted her head slightly. "Should we make that public now?"

"No," Seraphina said. "Let it simr. Let the whispers get loud first."

She walked off toward the testing chamber—one of the side rooms enclosed in glass, full of dangling wires and softly humming stations.

The walls were clean, the floor dry, but there was a dry heat in the air, like the room had been in use for days straight.

That sll of tal and ozone didn’t bother her. If anything, it kept her focused.

She stopped at the main console, stood there a mont longer, then turned her gaze one last ti to the ship waiting in Bay Four.

It was sitting there under the white lights, not painted, not branded, just raw and ready.

She spoke, barely loud enough to be heard.

"Fast enough to outrun a powerful superpower user in the Emperor realm. Quiet enough to leave no trace."

The assistant, standing nearby, wasn’t sure if she was ant to hear it or not. But Seraphina didn’t explain. She didn’t repeat herself either.

Because this wasn’t about slogans or speeches.

This was about timing.

When it started, she wouldn’t need a countdown.

She just needed the assurance that, once it moved, no one would be able to stop it.

The console let out a soft chi.

Stabilizers? Steady.

Power grid? Balanced.

Flight readiness? Confird.

She didn’t linger. She just turned and walked out.

Because her mind was already ten steps ahead.

And she had no doubt the sky would follow.

Far beyond the reach of corporate towers and regulated airspace, past the monitored sectors and fortified cities, there was a jagged stretch of land where rules stopped mattering.

A place that didn’t show up clearly on maps. The edge of the Forbidden Zone.

Liliana Nocturne stood at the rim of a shallow crater, crouched low, one hand bracing against the cracked earth.

Her brows were drawn together, eyes scanning the tunnel openings in front of her with quiet intensity.

She hadn’t said anything in several minutes. Not because there wasn’t anything to say. But because the more she looked, the more she realized sothing was off.

Three weeks ago, this place had been cleared—burned. Drones had confird the kill zone.

Surface teams had swept the ground, and the underground access points had been sealed tight. It had been clean, completely shut down.

And yet—here it was again.

Tunnels. Fresh ones. Wider than before. Longer. Reaching deeper than any of them had expected. And definitely not part of the original map.

She tapped her earpiece. "Pulse the scan again."

A quiet vibration rolled through the dirt, the hum carrying softly into the open shafts. Next to her, one of her field scouts stepped closer.

Slim build, face covered with matte goggles, voice steady. "Ma’am, we scanned this area twice.

We scrubbed it clean. There were no heat signatures. No residuals. This... this wasn’t here before. Not even close. And whatever made this? It moved fast."

Liliana didn’t respond right away. She was focused on the dirt just inside the tunnel’s edge.

It wasn’t just loose—it was layered, compressed from within. Sothing had pushed its way out. Not in a panic. Not chaotic.

Structured.

"This wasn’t a beast nest," she muttered.

The scout tilted his head but stayed quiet.

She stood up slowly and moved to the second tunnel entrance. This one hadn’t been there during the initial sweep. The files didn’t even list it.

Kneeling, she ran her glove along the stone, feeling for breaks, temperature, traces.

"Branch node," she said after a mont. "It’s not a standalone lair. It’s part of sothing bigger."

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