After about fifteen minutes of Angel's departure, Sophie and Lila watched as the survivors tried to regroup.
The healers who had been safeguarded thoroughly emerged to help the wounded. Their hands glowed with healing energy as they moved between bodies, checking pulses, assessing injuries, making quick decisions about who could be saved and who was already gone. The sounds were worse than the fighting had been. Crying. Moaning. Someone screaming Kowalski's name over and over until their voice broke.
Sophie stood near the camp's center, both plasma blades deactivated now, clipped to her tactical vest. Her muscles ached from sustained combat, from the boost Noah had provided wearing off and leaving her feeling heavy, slow, normal. The adrenaline was fading too, which meant her brain was starting to process what they'd just survived.
Fourteen two-horns. Four three-horns. All dead. And they'd only managed it through Noah's boost, through Angel's blood manipulation, through the Widow construct that now stood at the perimeter like a statue made of void energy.
A healer approached, an older woman named Martinez who'd been with the governor's staff for years. "Ms. Reign? We've got seven confirmed dead, twelve wounded seriously enough that they need immediate evacuation to proper medical facilities. Three more are critical. They might not make it through the night without surgery we can't perform here."
Sophie nodded, forcing herself to focus on immediate problems rather than the larger nightmare they were trapped in. "Do what you can. The Peregrine's medical bay should have supplies you can use. Take whoever you need and get them stabilized."
Martinez hesitated. "The ship's medical bay was damaged in the crash. Half the equipment is offline. I can work with what's functional, but—"
"Then work with what's functional," Sophie interrupted, not unkindly. "We don't have other options right now."
The healer nodded and moved back to coordinate with her team. Sophie watched her go, then looked at Lila who was standing a few feet away, staring at the Widow construct.
"That thing is disturbing," Lila said quietly. "I've seen Noah summon dragons. Watched him create void barriers and teleport and do all kinds of impossible things. But making a four-horn Harbinger construct? That's different."
"It's keeping us alive," Sophie replied. "That's all that matters right now."
"Is it though?" Lila turned to face her. "Because that construct is powered by Noah's void energy. Which means wherever he is, he just spent a massive amount of power to create it. On top of the boost he sent us. Second time he's done this and I have no idea how he does. Must be the domain link, right? But still, with all this, he still managed on top of whatever he's fighting out there."
Sophie had been trying not to think about that. About Noah somewhere in the forest, exhausted, possibly injured, facing threats they couldn't help with because they were needed here to protect survivors.
"Angel went after him," Sophie said. "She's Ark Division. If anyone can provide backup against three-horns, it's her."
"You trust her?" Lila asked. "Really?"
Sophie considered the question. Trust was complicated when you'd only known someone for a few hours—maybe days, when their capabilities bordered on terrifying, when they carried themselves with the kind of cold competence that suggested they'd killed more people than they'd saved.
"I trust that she wants Noah alive," Sophie said finally. "He's our best fighter, our faction leader, the one with capabilities nobody else has. Tactically, keeping him alive benefits her mission of protecting the governor. So yes, in that limited sense, I trust her."
Lila nodded slowly, accepting the logic even if she didn't like it. "We should check on Sebastian. Make sure Lyra hasn't done something stupid with the dark chi in his head."
The thought had been lurking in Sophie's mind since the fighting stopped. Lyra, alone with the governor in the panic room, with a bomb of condensed energy threaded through his brain stem. They'd been so focused on surviving the Harbinger assault that they'd left their hostage situation completely unmonitored.
"You're right," Sophie said. "The Widow construct can guard the camp. Everyone else is either wounded or helping the wounded. We need to verify Sebastian's status."
They started walking toward the Peregrine's crashed hull, leaving behind the sounds of survivors trying to put themselves back together. The ship looked worse in the aftermath of combat and moonlight from three celestial bodies. Hull plating peeled back in sections, revealing damaged interior compartments. Scorch marks from the atmospheric entry streaked across surfaces that had been pristine white when they'd departed Earth.
The panic room was located in the ship's most reinforced section, designed to survive even if the rest of the vessel was completely destroyed. Sophie and Lila navigated through twisted corridors, stepping over debris, until they reached the sealed door.
Sophie knocked. "Governor Sebastian? It's Sophie Reign and Lila Rowe. We're coming in to check on your status."
Silence answered for several seconds. Then Lyra's voice came through the intercom, cheerful and bright. "Oh good! I was wondering when you two would remember I existed. Come on in. The governor's perfectly fine."
The door unlocked with a pneumatic hiss. Sophie and Lila exchanged glances, both of them immediately on alert because Lyra sounding cheerful after everything that had just happened was wrong in ways that set off every instinct they'd developed from months of purely detesting her.
The panic room interior was surprisingly spacious. Maybe fifteen feet across, with reinforced walls that could withstand direct hits from anti-ship weapons. Governor Sebastian sat in one of the emergency seats, looking pale and lost but physically intact. His eyes looked sunken and he looked like someone in a vegetative state. His expensive suit was rumpled, dirt on his face, but no visible injuries.
Lyra stood near the far wall, leaning against it like she was at a social gathering rather than trapped on an alien planet. Her navigator uniform was torn in places, blood—dried and dark—staining the fabric around her left shoulder and ribs. Her face showed bruising around her jaw and temple, the kind of damage that came from impacts that would have killed someone without enhanced durability.
She looked rough. But she was smiling.
"Welcome, welcome," Lyra said, gesturing expansively. "Please, come in. We were just discussing how absolutely fucked this situation is. Governor Sebastian has some very colorful opinions about Harbinger biology. Did you know he minored in xenobiology before going into politics?"
Sebastian looked at Lyra with an expression that mixed fear and confusion. "I didn't—I mean, I mentioned it, but—"
"Shh, it's okay." Lyra's smile widened. "You're doing great. Just keep sitting there and not dying. That's your job right now."
"Isn't he the cutest?" She said to Sophie and Lyra who both knew the governor wasn't in his right mind at the moment. The dark chi was obviously affecting his brain in more than one way.
Sophie's hand went to her plasma blade hilt, not drawing but ready. "Status report. Are you hurt? Is the dark chi still in his head?"
"Which question do you want answered first?" Lyra pushed off from the wall, winced slightly as the movement pulled at her injured ribs, then walked toward the center of the room. "Yes, I'm hurt. Got absolutely demolished by that three-horn that attacked Noah and me during our little walk. Thing backhanded me into a tree trunk hard enough that I'm pretty sure my ribcage restructured itself anatomically. And yes, the dark chi is exactly where I left it. Sebastian's been a very good hostage."
Lila's telekinesis activated without conscious thought. Small objects in the panic room began vibrating, responding to her intent. "You crashed us here. You coordinated with Harbingers somehow. You put all of us in danger for whatever insane plan Arthur has running."
"Did I though?" Lyra's smile took on a quality that made Sophie's stomach turn. "Did I coordinate with Harbingers? Because let's think about that logically. Harbingers are intergalactic conquerors who view humanity as livestock. They barely tolerate working with Arthur, and only because he's powerful enough to be useful. Why would they coordinate with me? What leverage would I possibly have?"
She spread her hands, the gesture mockingly innocent.
"I sabotaged the ship, yes. Killed that engineer, stole her access card, damaged the cores enough that we'd need to make emergency repairs. That's true. But Harbingers attacking us in the middle of nowhere? That's not something I can take credit for." She paused, her smile widening. "Though I'll admit, the timing was almost too perfect to be coincidence."
Sophie's mind was racing, processing implications. "You're saying Arthur planned the Harbinger attack separately? That you weren't looped into that part?"
"I'm saying I don't know," Lyra replied. "Which is actually scarier if you think about it. Either Arthur coordinated a Harbinger assault without telling me, which means he doesn't trust me with his full plans. Or the Harbingers found us through their own methods and attacked independently, which means we're dealing with multiple hostile forces instead of one coordinated threat."
Lila's hands clenched into fists. "You're enjoying this. People died tonight. Crew members who had families, lives, futures. And you're standing here smiling like it's all a game."
"Oh, it absolutely is a game," Lyra agreed. "And Eclipse Faction keeps playing by the same rules, which makes you so predictable it's almost boring." She started pacing, her movements casual despite her injuries. "Let me walk you through it. The moment I saw Noah in that corridor, I knew exactly how this would play out. He'd get angry, confront me, try to figure out my plan. You two would support him, provide tactical analysis, attempt to outmaneuver whatever I was doing."
She stopped pacing, turned to face them directly.
"And you did. Every single step, exactly as expected. Noah confronted me during our patrol. You two focused on camp defense while tracking variables. Angel played her role perfectly as the competent protector. Even the Harbinger attack fit into predictable patterns—you fought, you survived, you adapted." Lyra laughed, the sound carrying genuine amusement. "The only surprise was that four-horn construct I saw a moment ago when I stepped out. That looks like Noah's doing. And to be honest, that's actually impressive. But everything else? Standard Eclipse playbook."
Sophie felt her jaw tighten. The worst part was that Lyra was right. They had been predictable. Had fallen into established patterns because those patterns had worked before.
"What's your point?" Sophie asked, keeping her voice level. "That you're smarter than us? That Arthur's plans are so complex we can't possibly counter them? We've heard this speech before, Lyra. It gets old."
"My point," Lyra said, her smile becoming sharper, "is that I've been studying you all for months. Learning your patterns, your relationships, your weaknesses." Her gaze shifted to Lila. "Speaking of which—Lila Rowe. Sophie's old academy rival. How exactly does that dynamic work now that you're both sleeping with Noah?"
Lila's expression went carefully blank, the kind of neutral that could mean she was actively suppressing reaction. Sophie felt heat rising in her face but forced it down through sheer will.
"That's none of your business," Sophie said.
"Oh, but it is though," Lyra countered. "Because understanding relationship dynamics tells me so much about how you make decisions, how you prioritize, where your actual loyalties lie." She looked between them, her smile widening. "Kelvin used to talk about you two back when we were all on the vanguard force together. Said Sophie was the mature senior, the tactical genius who always had a plan. Said Lila was the chaotic first-year who somehow rivaled Sophie despite being two years behind."
She started walking again, circling them like a predator assessing prey.
"He also said that Sophie and Noah were dating. That it was this big romance, the kind that made other people jealous because they were so obviously perfect for each other." Lyra paused. "But then Lila showed up. Somehow inserted herself into that dynamic. And now from what I understand, you're all one big happy harem with that space elf Seraleth thrown in for variety."
Sophie's hands were shaking. Not from fear—from rage that she was forcing down because losing control was exactly what Lyra wanted.
"You're trying to make us angry," Sophie said. "Get us emotional so we make mistakes. It's transparent manipulation."
"Of course it is," Lyra agreed cheerfully. "But that doesn't make it less effective. Because here's what I'm actually curious about—who does Noah love more? Is it you, Sophie? The girlfriend who's been there from the beginning? Or is it Lila, the newer model with time manipulation and that whole dangerous-crazy-blonde thing she has going on?"
Lila laughed. The sound came out wrong, carrying an edge that made even Lyra's smile falter slightly.
"You know," Lila said, her voice deceptively calm, "I see why Kelvin calls you a low-budget version of me. You think you're crazy? You think playing these little psychological games makes you dangerous?"
She stepped forward, and objects around the panic room started floating without her apparent concentration. Small items at first, then larger ones. A medical kit. A storage container. The emergency seats creaking as telekinetic force began testing their weight.
"I know I'm crazy," Lila continued. "I've accepted it. Embraced it. Used it as a weapon against people who underestimated what crazy actually means. You're just pretending, Lyra. Playing at being unstable while following Arthur's plans like a good little girl."
Her smile widened, showing teeth, and something in her pale blue eyes suggested she was finding this genuinely funny.
"So if you want to play psychological games about who Noah loves more, go ahead. But understand that I'm actually willing to see how far crazy goes. Are you?"
Sophie moved between them, both hands raised, breaking the line of sight. "Enough. Both of you."
She looked at Lila. "As much as I'd love to watch you tear her apart, we need answers first. And we need to get the dark chi out of Sebastian's head before she detonates it."
Then she turned to Lyra. "So what's your actual play here? You said you sabotaged the ship to crash us. Why? What does stranding the eastern cardinal's governor on an uncharted planet accomplish for Arthur's plans?"
Lyra's smile softened slightly, becoming almost genuine. "My mission was simple. Keep Sebastian in the eastern quadrant. Make sure he never made it to Raiju Prime for those diplomatic meetings with the Grey family."
"Why?" Sophie pressed.
"Because what happens on Raiju Prime matters less than what happens on Earth while he's gone," Lyra replied. "Sebastian is a symbol, a stabilizing presence. Remove him from the eastern quadrant at the exact right moment, and you create opportunities for chaos."
Sophie felt ice settling in her chest. "What did you do?"
"Me? Nothing. I'm here, stranded on this lovely planet with all of you." Lyra's smile widened. "But back on Earth, in the eastern quadrant specifically, while we've been fighting Harbingers and trying to survive?" She paused for effect. "Let's just say Hell has been unleashed. A simple test of what's to come."
Lila's brows upturned. "What does that mean? What's happening in the eastern quadrant?"
Sophie's mind was already connecting dots, running through implications, and the answer hit her like physical impact. The eastern quadrant was where Eclipse headquarters was located. Where Kelvin, Diana, Seraleth, and Lucas were stationed. Where their faction members were training. Where millions of civilians lived their lives, unaware that someone like Arthur might target them.
"What did you do?" Sophie repeated, her voice barely above a whisper.
Lyra looked at both of them, her smile becoming something terrible and gleeful.
"Let's just say," she drew out the words, tongue clicking against her teeth in mock sympathy, "life can be kruuuuellll."
The way she said it. The emphasis on that last word. The mocking tone that suggested she was delivering a punchline they should already understand.
Sophie felt all the energy drain from her face. All the hope, all the confidence, everything that had been keeping her functional through impossible situations. It drained away as the implications crystallized into horrible certainty.
"It's Kruel," Sophie said, her voice barely audible. "He's there."
Lyra's smile was radiant, blood-covered teeth showing, and she didn't confirm or deny. Didn't need to.
The silence in the panic room was absolute.
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