The first thing Noah did when the Vel’ai council said yes was nothing.
He stood in that room for exactly three seconds and let the weight of what had just been agreed to settle into sothing real. Four hundred million people. Seventeen colonies spread across a planet he had been on for less than twelve hours. A governing body that had just transmitted an authorization across their entire world telling their people to trust the humans that were already standing in their cities.
Three seconds.
Then he started moving.
The ground teams had been in position for hours. Sixteen teams across sixteen locations, Eclipse mbers and task force personnel and Ares soldiers who had volunteered and whose king had not stopped them, sitting in shadows and rooftops and the gaps between structures waiting for exactly this signal. The mont the Vel’ai transmission went out across the planet’s comm network, every team leader received the sa ssage through their earpiece simultaneously.
Green light. Begin contact protocols.
For context, contact protocols weren’t complicated. They were deliberate. The idea was not to walk up to four hundred million people and announce that an alien fleet was in orbit and a catastrophic fight was coming and everyone needed to leave. That was how you got panic. Panic was how you got people running in directions that weren’t useful and trampling each other and refusing to cooperate with anything because fear had eaten the part of their brain that processed instructions.
The idea was simpler than that.
Their leaders had spoken. The Vel’ai governing structure had transmitted authorization. Which ant every team on the ground had official backing before they said a single word to a single civilian. They weren’t strangers arriving with terrifying news. They were agents of an authorized operation that the planet’s own leadership had sanctioned.
That distinction mattered more than anything else about the first day.
Noah walked out of the eastern building into the alien morning and looked at the city around him. It was fully light now, whatever this planet called morning having arrived while they were inside, and the city was doing what cities did at this hour which was wake up. The Vel’ai moved through their streets on their three legs with the rolling gait he had been watching for hours, going about the business of a day that was already different from every day before it even if most of them didn’t know that yet.
He pulled up his wrist display.
Drone feeds from across the planet filled the screen in a grid. Eleven thousand caras showing him eleven thousand pieces of a world all at once. Markets opening. Children moving through streets toward wherever Vel’ai children went in the mornings. Coastlines and grasslands and the dense forested zones of the northern continent. The seventeen colonies distributed across the landmass in the pattern of a civilization that had grown organically over centuries rather than being planned from the top down.
He was looking at all of it.
And anywhere he could see, he could go.
’Day one is about trust,’ he thought. ’Not movent. The movent cos when they believe us. You don’t ask soone to step into a portal the sa day you et them. You show them what you are first. You show them the operation working. You show them that what their leaders said is real and that the people standing in their cities an what they say.’
He opened his comm. "All teams. Status."
The responses ca in sequence. Sixteen team leaders, sixteen locations across the planet.
Colony one, contact established with local authority representative. Cooperation tentative but present.
Colony three, civilians curious, no hostility, translation devices functioning at acceptable capacity.
Colony seven, minor incident, two Vel’ai who hadn’t received the transmission yet attempted to remove the team from their location, resolved when the transmission was shown to them directly.
Colony twelve, full cooperation, local authority had been expecting contact since the transmission, had questions about tiline.
Colony fifteen, no local authority present at the designated contact point, team relocating to secondary position.
Noah listened to all of it and made decisions in real ti. Colony fifteen needed a second team. He blinked there, confird the layout from a drone feed, grabbed two Eclipse mbers from a low density position nearby and blinked back. Thirty seconds. Done.
This was the work of day one.
Not dramatic. Not cinematic. Just sixteen simultaneous first contacts being managed across a planet while Diana walked beside him through the city streets with Shade masked and moving sowhere behind them, and the alien morning continued around them as though the world wasn’t quietly being reorganized from the inside.
---
On the Eternal Pyre, Kelvin’s eyes were green.
Not faintly. Not at the edges. Fully, completely green, the technopathy running at a level that pushed the color from the center of his irises outward until the original brown was gone entirely. All four hands were occupied. His main hands worked two separate display interfaces, pulling and pushing data between them with the practiced fluency of soone who had been doing this for so long that the boundary between himself and the technology he was interfacing with had beco genuinely unclear. His auxiliary arms were extended, the teal light in their palms pulsing at different rhythms as they interfaced with separate systems simultaneously.
Four control points. Four independent data streams. All of them feeding into the sa picture.
The picture was a planet.
For context, what Kelvin was doing would have required an entire intelligence division in any conventional military operation. Sensor arrays, analyst teams, processing infrastructure, all of it coordinated through layers of human oversight and bureaucratic sign-off. Kelvin was doing it alone with four arms and a technopathic spine and the eleven thousand drone caras that were his eyes across the surface of an alien world.
Twelve holographic screens floated around his station, each one showing a different data layer. Thermal mapping of the planet’s surface. Electromagnetic signatures. The comm traffic from the ground teams feeding in through the encrypted channel he had built specifically for this operation. The Vel’ai comm network, which he had interfaced with through the Universal Interface in the first hour after insertion, its architecture unfolding to him on contact the way all technology unfolded on contact, completely and without resistance.
And underneath all of it, the search.
The Vel’ai council had said the southern territories. Beyond that the information was vague in the way that information about sothing you had deliberately avoided looking at closely was always vague. They knew it was there. They had chosen not to engage it. The details of where exactly and in what configuration were details they had not gathered because gathering them would have required getting close and getting close was not what their non-interference policy had recomnded.
Kelvin was getting close remotely.
The southern territories were largely unpopulated. The drone dispersal had been thinner there because the population density was lower and the original dispersal algorithm had weighted toward populated areas. He was working with maybe three hundred caras in a zone that covered a significant fraction of the planet’s southern landmass.
Three hundred caras across terrain that included the collapsed coastal shelf the scouts had identified. Partially subrged ruins. The remnants of what the Vel’ai records described as an old settlent, abandoned centuries ago when the coastline shifted and the sea claid the lower districts.
Sothing had been living in those ruins for two years.
He pulled up the thermal layer for the southern coastal zone and looked at it.
The ruins registered as cold. Expected. Stone that had been in contact with seawater for centuries ran cold. The water around them ran cold. The open sea beyond the shelf ran cold.
Except.
One section. In the deepest part of the ruin cluster, where the original settlent’s central structures had been before the sea took them. A thermal signature that was not the ambient temperature of ancient wet stone.
Warm.
Not hot. Not the blazing signature of sothing running at Harbinger tabolic levels in active combat. Just warm. The kind of warm that sothing large produced when it was at rest. When it was waiting.
Kelvin looked at it for a long ti.
Then he pulled up the electromagnetic layer over the sa section.
The ruins were generating a field. Faint, distributed across the structure rather than concentrated at a point, the kind of field that appeared when sothing had been interfacing with the physical environnt around it for an extended period. Reorganizing it. Adjusting it.
’He’s been modifying the ruins,’ Kelvin thought. ’Two years. He’s had two years to turn that place into whatever he wanted it to be.’
He opened a comm to Noah. "I have a thermal signature in the southern coastal ruins. Warm, not hot. Resting state." He paused. "And he’s done sothing to the structure down there. The EM field pattern suggests modification over an extended period. It’s not just ruins anymore. He’s made it into sothing."
Noah’s voice ca back. "How confident."
"Ninety percent on the location," Kelvin said. "The modification detail I’m reading from indirect signatures so there’s interpretation involved. But the thermal is solid." He looked at the screen. "He’s there, Noah. He’s been there."
"Copy," Noah said. "Keep watching. Don’t move assets south yet."
"Understood," Kelvin said.
He kept watching.
The warm signature in the ruins didn’t move. Didn’t fluctuate. Just sat there in the thermal layer, steady and patient, exactly where it had been for two years.
---
Three decks below Kelvin’s station, in one of the Eternal Pyre’s smaller ditation rooms that Aurelius’s people used for purposes that didn’t translate cleanly into any human equivalent, Sophie sat on the floor with her legs crossed and her hands in her lap and her eyes closed.
The King’s Gaze was beside her. Not on her belt. Set down on the floor to her left, the eye facing away from her, the way she had started positioning it when she ditated because she had learned that having the eye looking at her while she tried to clear her head produced the opposite result which was not clearing her head that she found counterproductive.
She had been doing this every morning since the operation began. Not because she was particularly practiced at ditation. Because the King’s Gaze had been doing sothing since they got into this system that she needed to understand before it mattered in a situation where understanding it after the fact was too late.
The weapon had been louder since they entered the Valdris system.
Not audibly louder. The voice wasn’t sothing you heard with your ears. It was sothing that arrived the way certain thoughts arrived, from a direction that wasn’t inside you and wasn’t outside you, just present in a way that bypassed the usual channels.
It had been saying things.
Fragnts mostly. Incomplete sentences that the translator portion of her brain kept trying to finish and kept failing to finish because the grammar of whatever the King’s Gaze was producing wasn’t human grammar.
Kill.
All.
Them.
She was trying to understand the target.
Normally, Royal Decree required a target. It required her to be looking at sothing, aware of sothing, directing the command at sothing specific. She had tested this on the water bottle in her room. The command landed on what she was focused on when she gave it.
Which ant the weapon telling her kill them all was giving her a command that required her to identify who all was.
And the problem was that on a planet currently occupied by a four horn Harbinger and probably of lesser Harbingers and four hundred million Vel’ai civilians and the entirety of Eclipse and the Ares fleet and every person she had ever cared about, KILL ALL was a category that could an almost anything.
She breathed.
In. Out.
The King’s Gaze sat beside her with its eye facing the wall.
She was trying to feel the direction of it. Not the words. The direction underneath the words. The thing the weapon was actually reading when it produced that specific combination of them.
Sothing hostile.
Sothing that intended harm on a massive scale.
Sothing the weapon had been tracking since before they entered the system and had been getting louder about as the distance closed.
She breathed again.
’It’s not random,’ she thought. ’The King’s Gaze doesn’t produce noise. It reads. Sovereign Sight reads hostile intent, vulnerabilities, hidden threats. If it’s been saying kill them all since before we landed, it’s been reading sothing specific that entire ti. Sothing that has had this intent since before we got here.’
’Since before we got here.’
She opened her eyes.
Looked at the King’s Gaze.
The eye was facing away from her.
But the blue light at the edges of the weapon’s body was visible even from this angle, and it was brighter than it had been this morning when she sat down.
She picked it up.
The eye rotated toward her imdiately, the way it always rotated toward her when she made contact, the blue of it settling into its usual steady pulse.
She looked at it for a mont.
Then she put it back down with the eye facing away.
And from sowhere that wasn’t inside her and wasn’t outside her, clear and imdiate and louder than it had ever been before:
"KILL THEM ALL."
Sophie sat very still in the ditation room on a fleet in orbit above an alien planet.
She looked at the King’s Gaze.
The eye was facing away from her.
But it was open.
And it was looking at sothing she couldn’t see.
Reviews
All reviews (0)