Somewhere in deep space, three systems away from Earth and closing, the Eclipse transport cut through FTL with a low hum that vibrated through the deck plating. The ship was small by warship standards—barely sixty meters bow to stern—but fast, equipped with Grey family engine modifications that pushed it harder than civilian regulations allowed. The interior was cramped, functional, designed for short-term operations rather than comfort.
Noah sat in the main cabin, one hand resting on his knee, the other draped across the armrest of a chair that had seen better days. The viewport beside him showed the impossible colors of faster-than-light travel, reality stretched and distorted in ways that made his eyes hurt if he looked too long. So he didn't look. Just stared at the deck plating instead, running through scenarios, trying to anticipate what they'd find at Hollowstar.
Kelvin occupied the seat across from him, legs stretched out, prosthetic fingers tapping against his thigh in a rhythm that suggested nervous energy with nowhere to go. Diana sat near the navigation console, checking ammunition counts for the third time in an hour. Sophie was reviewing tactical data on her tablet, swiping through intelligence reports Lucy had forwarded. Seraleth stood near the cockpit entrance, her seven-foot frame making the already cramped space feel smaller, luminous eyes tracking everything with intensity. Lila had claimed a corner seat and hadn't moved in twenty minutes, just staring at nothing.
"You know what I keep thinking about?" Kelvin said suddenly, breaking the silence that had settled over them like fog. "Storm. Just—Storm. Standing there in the arena while Commander Drex Hithler tries to figure out if challenging a literal dragon counts as brave or suicidal."
Diana didn't look up from her ammunition check. "We're supposed to be focusing on Hollowstar."
"I am focusing. I'm focusing on the fact that we pulled off the most audacious political maneuver in faction history and I'm not even there to watch it happen." Kelvin's grin was manic. "Sam's probably having the time of his life. Just standing there, perfectly calm, while Vanguard loses their collective minds. 'Oh, you wanted a champion? Here's a dragon. Enjoy.'"
"Storm's perfectly capable of handling himself," Sophie said without looking up from her tablet. "He's fought three-horn Harbingers independently. Drex Hithler is an S ranked at best. It's not even a contest."
"That's what makes it beautiful," Kelvin replied. "Vanguard thought they were getting a fight. Instead they're getting a biology lesson on why humans don't challenge apex predators." He paused, his expression shifting to something more thoughtful. "Although, real talk, what are the odds Drex actually tries to fight? Like, genuine question. Does he look at Storm and think 'yeah, I can take that,' or does he forfeit immediately?"
"Depends on his pride," Diana said. "Some people can't accept losing even when losing is the smart option."
"So he dies stupidly."
"Probably."
Kelvin laughed, the sound carrying genuine amusement. "Man, I really hope someone's recording this. Wait, no, I know someone's recording this. My camera drones are there. I'm going to have the most-watched footage in human history and I'm missing it in real time because we're jumping through space to punch an immortal nightmare in the face."
"Priorities," Sophie murmured.
"Terrible priorities," Kelvin agreed cheerfully. "But necessary priorities. Which brings us to Hollowstar. Noah, buddy, you've been quiet. Like, concerningly quiet. You good?"
Noah glanced up, met Kelvin's eyes for a moment, then looked back at the deck. "Storm's got it."
"That's it? That's all you're giving me?"
"What do you want me to say?" Noah's voice was calm, steady. "Storm knows what he's doing. He's fought beside us for months. He understands tactics, understands threats, understands when to hold back and when to go full force. Sam's there to handle the political side. Between the two of them, Vanguard's either going to forfeit or they're going to learn why challenging Eclipse was a mistake."
"But you're not worried."
"I'm worried about Arthur," Noah replied. "Everything else is secondary."
Kelvin studied him for a moment, then nodded slowly. "Fair. Yeah, okay, fair. We're walking into a fight with someone who's survived a thousand years, who copies abilities like he's collecting trading cards, who trapped Lucas Grey in a shadow dimension just to prove he could. That's definitely worth worrying about more than a faction challenge."
"Lucy's forces are already in position," Seraleth said from her spot near the cockpit. She'd been monitoring communications, coordinating with Grey command through encrypted channels. "Three warships maintaining high orbit. Ground teams deployed to observation positions around the primary settlement. They're waiting for our arrival before moving to active engagement."
"How many soldiers did Lucy commit?" Diana asked.
"Two hundred," Seraleth replied. "Plus technical support, medical personnel, and command staff. Commander Hight is handling tactical coordination. Princess Lucy is commanding overall operations personally."
That made Lila look up from her corner. "Lucy's on the ground?"
"Affirmative," Seraleth confirmed. "She arrived with the initial deployment. Apparently she refused to command this operation remotely."
"Her father might be there," Sophie said quietly. "Her brother probably is, somewhere in Arthur's network. This is personal for her."
"Personal makes people reckless," Diana observed.
"Personal also makes people motivated," Seraleth countered. "Lucy Grey is one of the most tactically sound commanders I've encountered. Her emotional investment won't compromise her judgment."
The ship shuddered slightly as it transitioned between FTL layers, a normal part of long-distance travel but still unnerving when it happened. Kelvin's fingers drummed faster against his thigh.
"So let's talk about what we're walking into," Kelvin said. "Because I've read the intelligence reports and they're thin on actual details. We know Arthur's there. We know there are occupants—human occupants, apparently, which raises about fifty questions I don't have answers for. We know the planet is habitable, breathable atmosphere, Earth-standard gravity. But that's it. We don't know defensive positions, we don't know force strength, we don't know if Arthur's alone or if he's got an army."
"He won't be alone," Noah said. "Arthur doesn't take unnecessary risks. If he's using Hollowstar as a base, it's fortified."
"Infinite Soldiers?" Diana suggested.
"Probably. Maybe Purge operatives. Maybe something else entirely." Noah's hand tightened slightly on the armrest. "Arthur's had centuries to prepare. Whatever we find at Hollowstar, it won't be simple."
Sophie swiped to a different section of her intelligence data. "Grey surveillance indicates the primary settlement is small. Maybe forty structures total, arranged in a roughly circular pattern around a central building. No obvious military fortifications visible from orbit. No weapon emplacements, no vehicle depots, nothing that screams 'military installation.'"
"Which means the defenses are hidden or the settlement itself isn't the real target," Seraleth said. "Arthur wouldn't establish a base without protection."
"Or he's confident enough he doesn't need visible defenses," Lila added from her corner. Her voice was quiet but carried across the cabin. "He's the Eighth. He's survived fights with the other seven originals. Maybe he figures nothing we bring can threaten him anyway."
"Overconfidence gets people killed," Diana said.
"Does it?" Lila's pale blue eyes fixed on Diana. "Because Arthur's been alive for centuries. Trapped for forty-seven years in a void-resistant prison and he still escaped. Fought Noah and Lucas simultaneously and walked away without serious injury and I hear that was his clone. Doubled down to capturing Lucas specifically because he wanted to. When does confidence become overconfidence if you actually can back it up?"
Silence settled again, heavier this time. Because Lila was right. Arthur had earned his reputation through results, not posturing.
"We've got one advantage," Noah said eventually. "Arthur doesn't know we're coming. He knows we're hunting him, knows we'll keep pressing, but he doesn't know we've located Hollowstar. Grey surveillance was covert, long-range, nothing that would trigger detection. We're hitting him before he can prepare specifically for us."
"Assuming he needs to prepare," Kelvin muttered. "But yeah, okay, surprise is good. Surprise plus overwhelming force is better. We've got two dragons, two hundred Grey soldiers, Lucy commanding, and enough firepower to level a small city. If we can't take Arthur with those advantages, we're screwed anyway."
The ship shuddered again, more pronounced this time. Sophie glanced at the navigation readout. "Transition to normal space in five minutes. Hollowstar system approach begins immediately after."
Everyone started moving. Kelvin activated KROME's containment case, running diagnostics that made the device hum. Seraleth pulled on specialized gauntlets that Kelvin had designed specifically for her—reinforced striking surfaces, integrated energy projection systems, painted in matte black that absorbed light. Lila stood and stretched, rolling her shoulders, preparing her body for combat that could come at any moment.
Sophie kept her eyes on the tactical data but her hands moved to the twin blades mounted across her back, checking that they drew smoothly from their sheaths. Noah stayed seated, didn't move, just breathed steadily and let his Chi circulate through pathways that had become familiar over months of practice.
"Noah," Seraleth said from near the cockpit. "Lucy wants to sync communications before we make orbit. She's patching through now."
A holographic display materialized in the center of the cabin. Lucy Grey's face resolved, sharp and focused, her expression carrying determination that made her look older than her years. She wore tactical armor painted in Grey family blue and white, her dark hair pulled back tight, a sidearm visible at her hip.
"Eclipse team," Lucy said without preamble. "Welcome to Hollowstar. We've maintained surveillance for the past eight hours. No indication Arthur's aware of our presence. Ground teams are positioned at six observation points around the primary settlement. Commander Hight is coordinating their deployment."
"What have you observed?" Noah asked.
"Activity consistent with civilian settlement. Individuals moving between structures, children visible in what appears to be a central gathering area, no military vehicles or obvious defensive preparations." Lucy paused. "But here's what's strange. We've counted approximately thirty adult females and maybe fifteen children. No adult males except one."
"Arthur," Sophie said.
"We believe so, though we haven't confirmed visual identification yet. The individual in question matches Arthur's general build and movement patterns based on your previous encounter descriptions." Lucy's expression shifted, became more troubled. "But the demographics are wrong. Thirty women, fifteen children, one man. That's not a military base. That's not a research station. It's a community, and the ratios don't make sense."
Kelvin leaned forward. "Are they prisoners? Hostages?"
"They don't behave like prisoners," Lucy replied. "They move freely, interact normally, appear to be conducting daily routines without obvious coercion. But the absence of other adult males is glaring."
Noah felt something cold settle in his chest. Thirty women. Fifteen children. One man. Arthur.
"This reminds me of Lilivil," Noah said slowly. "The elf world. All female population, reproduction through energy storage and binary fission. No males because their biology doesn't require them."
"Except these are humans," Sophie added. "Confirmed through thermal imaging and movement analysis. Human biology requires male and female for reproduction."
"Unless Arthur's doing something else," Diana said. The implication hung in the air, unspoken but understood by everyone.
Lucy's holographic face showed controlled anger. "We'll find out when we move in. Which brings us to operational planning. I want Eclipse to approach from the southern vector. My forces will maintain position north, east, and west. When Arthur's confirmed on-site, we collapse inward simultaneously. Cut off escape routes, force engagement, capture or eliminate."
"And Lucas?" Noah asked quietly.
Lucy's expression flickered. "Intelligence suggests he's not physically present at Hollowstar. The shadow dimension Arthur used operates independently of physical location. But Arthur is our best chance at finding the access point. We capture him, we get Lucas back."
"Understood," Noah said.
"Transition to normal space in sixty seconds," Sophie announced, reading the navigation display.
Lucy's hologram nodded once. "Good hunting, Eclipse. Grey forces out."
The transmission ended. The cabin felt quieter without Lucy's presence, tension replacing the brief moment of coordination.
Reality snapped back with a lurch that made Kelvin grab his armrests. The impossible colors vanished, replaced by normal starlight, normal darkness, normal physics. Ahead, visible through the cockpit viewport, a planet hung against the void. Brown continents, blue oceans, white ice caps at both poles. It looked peaceful.
Hollowstar.
"Grey warships confirmed in high orbit," Sophie reported. "Receiving approach vectors now. We're cleared for landing at designated coordinates, southern approach, two kilometers from primary settlement."
"Take us down," Noah said.
The Eclipse transport angled toward the planet's surface, atmospheric entry creating friction that made the hull glow dull orange. They descended through cloud layers, altitude dropping rapidly, ground resolution improving with each passing second. The settlement became visible—scattered structures arranged around a central building, exactly as Lucy's intelligence had described.
They landed in a forested area two kilometers south, trees providing natural concealment, the ship's stealth systems minimizing thermal and electromagnetic signatures. The boarding ramp extended with a hydraulic hiss, admitting air that tasted like Earth but wasn't, carrying scents of vegetation that almost matched home but didn't quite.
Noah was first down the ramp, boots hitting soil that compressed under his weight. The others followed quickly, spreading out in tactical formation that had become second nature through months of combat operations.
Grey soldiers materialized from concealment positions, ghosts in blue and white tactical armor, weapons held ready but not threatening. Commander Hight approached from the tree line, her expression was professional.
"Eclipse team," Hight said by way of greeting. "Welcome to the worst surveillance operation I've run in twenty years. Come on. Observation post is five hundred meters northeast. Lucy's waiting."
They followed Hight through forest that could have been Earth forest except for subtle differences in bark texture, leaf patterns, the way light filtered through the canopy. The observation post was a natural depression ringed by fallen logs, camouflage netting overhead, Grey soldiers positioned with long-range optics and sensor equipment.
Lucy stood at the center, studying a tactical display that showed the settlement in real-time through multiple drone feeds. She glanced up as Eclipse arrived, nodded once, then gestured them closer.
"We've been watching for eight hours," Lucy said without preamble. "Here's what we know."
The display shifted, showing overhead view of the settlement. Thirty structures, arranged in concentric circles, central building larger than the rest. People moved between them, small figures captured by high-resolution imaging.
"Children range from maybe five years old to early teens," Lucy continued. "All of them appear healthy, well-fed, behaving like normal children. They play, they attend what looks like educational sessions in the central building, they eat communal meals. Normal."
"Except for the demographics," Noah said.
"Except for that," Lucy agreed. She zoomed the display, focusing on individual figures. "The women range from late twenties to mid-forties based on movement analysis and body structure. They wear simple clothing, nothing military, nothing that suggests prisoner status. They interact with the children, with each other, conduct daily routines that look domestic rather than institutional."
"Where are they from?" Diana asked. "These people are human, but Hollowstar isn't registered in EDF databases. This planet doesn't officially exist."
"We don't know," Lucy admitted. "Could be from one of the original family worlds. Could be descendants of people Arthur took centuries ago. Could be something else entirely. We won't know until we question them directly."
Sophie was studying the tactical display with focused intensity. "You said one adult male. Where is he?"
"That's the problem," Lucy replied. "We've been maintaining surveillance for eight hours and we haven't seen him. The women and children are visible, moving through their routines, but the individual we believe is Arthur hasn't appeared once."
"He's there," Noah said with certainty. "He doesn't travel by ship. I've fought him. He moves through shadows the way I move through void space. He's there, just not visible yet."
"Then we wait," Lucy said. "We maintain observation until he shows himself. The moment we have visual confirmation, we move."
Kelvin activated KROME's diagnostic systems, the case on his chest humming softly. "So we're playing stakeout. Great. I'm fantastic at stakeout. I can sit still for hours at a time without moving or complaining or making sarcastic commentary about the inherent absurdity of watching a domestic settlement while preparing to fight an immortal."
"Kelvin," Sophie said.
"Right. Being quiet now."
They settled into observation positions, each person finding angles that gave them clear sightlines to the settlement while remaining concealed. Time passed slowly, measured in heartbeats and steady breathing and the gradual shift of sunlight across alien soil.
Noah watched through high-powered optics, seeing details that made his chest tighten. Children playing some kind of game in an open area, laughing, running, completely normal behavior. Women working at what looked like cultivation plots, growing food, tending plants. A domestic scene that would have been unremarkable on any human settlement except for the glaring absence, the missing half of the demographic that should have been present.
"This is wrong," Lila whispered from her position beside Noah. "This whole thing is wrong."
"I know," Noah replied quietly.
An hour passed. Then another. The children filed into the central building in organized lines, supervised by several women, disappearing inside for what was probably educational sessions. Other women continued their work, maintaining the settlement, preparing food, conducting repairs on structures that showed minor wear.
Everything was normal. Too normal.
"Movement," one of Lucy's soldiers called out quietly. "Central building, main entrance."
Every optic swiveled toward the specified location. The central building's door opened. Children emerged in the same organized lines, supervised by the same women, filing back toward smaller structures that were probably residences.
And behind them, standing in the doorway, a figure Noah recognized immediately.
Arthur.
He looked exactly the same as their previous encounter. Young, maybe mid-twenties in appearance though that meant nothing given his actual age. Brown hair past his shoulders, simple clothing that could have been worn by anyone in the settlement. He stood in the doorway watching the children disperse, his posture relaxed, no visible weapons, no apparent concern about security.
"Visual confirmation," Lucy said, her voice tight with controlled emotion. "Target identified. Arthur Kaine, the Eighth, confirmed on-site."
Noah's hand folded into fist automatically. Beside him, Diana's fingers flexed, momentum fields flickering into existence and dissipating just as quickly. Kelvin's KROME case began humming louder as he activated full deployment protocols.
"How did he get there?" Sophie asked, her voice carrying confusion. "We've been watching for hours. He didn't arrive by ship. There's been no vehicle movement. How—"
"Shadows," Noah interrupted. "He travels through shadows the same way I travel through void. He was probably inside the whole time, just not visible until he chose to be."
Arthur stepped fully out of the doorway, surveying the settlement with the casual attention of someone checking their property. He said something to one of the nearby women, too distant for audio pickup, but her response looked deferential. Then he turned, beginning to walk toward the settlement's perimeter.
Toward their position.
"Does he know we're here?" Diana asked quietly.
"I don't know," Noah replied, watching Arthur's approach through the optics. "But it doesn't matter. He's exposed. We have numbers. This is our shot."
Lucy's voice cut through the comms, sharp and decisive. "All units, this is Grey actual. Target confirmed on-site. Arthur Kaine, the Eighth, approaching southern perimeter. Eclipse and Grey ground teams, prepare for immediate engagement. On my mark, we collapse inward and force confrontation. This ends today."
Kelvin's KROME case opened with mechanical precision. Components unfolded, expanding, morphing around his body as the full ten-ton combat mech assembled in under three seconds. The fusion reactor's glow was visible through ventilation slats, blue-white light that made the forest shadows dance.
Sophie drew her twin blades from sheaths across her back, the metal catching sunlight, edges sharp enough to cut through space itself if swung properly.
Seraleth flexed her hands, the specialized gauntlets Kelvin had built activating with a low hum, energy projection systems coming online, ready to deliver strikes that could shatter concrete.
Two hundred Grey soldiers rose from concealment positions, weapons raised, targeting solutions locked, waiting for the order.
Arthur continued walking toward the forest's edge, apparently unaware or unconcerned about the overwhelming force preparing to engage him.
Lucy's voice came through the comms one final time. "All units. Arthur Kaine is in the open. Time to move. Execute."
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