22. Draevik
DRAEVIK
The door hisses shut behind us, its heavy magnetic locks thudding into place with a finality that echoes through the darkened corridor.
In the throat of the secondary reactor sub-level, my twin pulses beat a constant, percussive cadence.
The adrenaline-fueled Weave has finished the bulk of its repair, leaving the skin of my side tight and itching, a localized sun of regenerative heat.
A sharp twinge of pain bites into my abdomen when I shift my weight, a brutal reminder of the slug that nearly ended me.
But the agony is distant now, overridden safely by the bond.
I flex my arm, testing the newly sealed muscle.
I am far more than recovered enough to fight; I am ready to tear it all down if it means keeping her safe.
I power through the sting, my internal HUD flickering back to life.
The pixels are still distorted, a graveyard of red warning icons dancing across my field of vision, but the primary tactical overlays have stabilized. I run a scan. Virex Prime groans around us, a deep, structural moan that travels through the base of my boots.
Sector Four: Life support failing. Sector Nine: Fire suppression offline. Primary Bridge: Hardlocks engaged, but digital ghosts are gnawing at the encryption.
Pinpointing the intruders, my sensors isolate six erratic, frantic biological signatures inside the galley.
They are celebratory, their movements sluggish with the greed of scavengers who think they have already won.
Another six are moving through the hydroponics bay, likely looking for a way to the auxiliary engines.
"The galley is the priority," I decide, the sound echoing off the cold, metallic walls. "If they breach the internal atmosphere controls there, they can vent the lower decks."
I analyze the tactical route. Logic dictates I leave Nyra in the bunker.
She functions as a biological vulnerability, a human frame of bone and blood vulnerable to a direct kinetic impact.
Standard protocol demands I move with maximum velocity, clearing the corridors with high-output pulse-fire and ignoring everything but the objective.
I keep her at my side. I grant her the space to stand in the fire with me.
Acknowledging the tactical deficit of our formation, I calculate that while my speed is halved by her gait, keeping her close is paramount. The machinery of war now operates at a loss, deliberately prioritizing a single life over the optimal preservation of the vessel.
I acknowledge the error, and I choose to maintain it.
"We take the maintenance shafts," Nyra decides sharply and clearly in the dark. She checks the charge on the Hegemony sidearm I gave her, her movements sure and practiced. "The boarders will be looking for nothing larger than a rat in the sub-floors."
"I am significantly larger than a rat," I joke, the words tasting of iron and a strange, new amusement.
"Then don't get stuck," she retorts, a ghost of a smirk playing on her lips.
I lead the way toward the first access hatch. Every stride is an exercise in restraint. I match her pace, my sensors tracking her breathing as closely as the enemy’s movement. The tether in my chest moves in time with her heart. It provides a clarity that no tactical overlay can match.
We reach the hatch. I seize the heavy metal wheel, my fingers indenting the steel as I wrench it open. The smell of old grease and static wafts up from the dark.
"Clear," I announce, my eyes scanning the shaft for any sign of traps.
The ship continues to scream in the distance, a low-hertz roar that tells me Virex Prime is losing its fight against the Carrion King. We are the only defense left. Warlord and scavenger together—standing between this ship and the vacuum.
Stepping into the dark, my massive shoulders brush against the narrow walls of the shaft. I stand entirely compromised, yet the desire to repair the damage or correct the fault never comes.
The crawlspace turns out to be a suffocating tunnel of ribbed obsidian and exposed cabling, a narrow vein in the throat of a dying god.
I move on all fours, the internal servos in my joints whining as they compensate for the cramped dimensions.
My broad shoulders scrape against the conduit housings, sending a shower of orange sparks into the dark.
Behind me, the sound of Nyra’s breathing is an invariable anchor.
She moves with a fluid grace that makes my own bulk feel like an evolutionary mistake.
We reach a junction where three primary data trunks intersect.
A thick cluster of severed fiber-optic cables hangs from the ceiling, weeping reflective blue fluid that hisses against the floor.
A heavy mix of ozone and cooling-leakage metal fills the space.
The ship is bleeding, and the scent of its mechanical blood fills my sensors.
"The environmental scrubbers for this sector are dead. The atmospheric pressure is dropping. The auxiliary pump requires a manual prime to keep the galley pressurized."
I scan the junction. The manual override is behind a high-voltage stabilizer, a position that requires a reach my massive hands would crush.
The clearance is barely wide enough for a human limb, let alone a Reaper’s armored hand.
I look back at Nyra. She is already assessing the damage, her eyes sharp and calculating in the dim, strobe-like flickers of the failing power lines.
"I can reach it," she proclaims, sliding past me in the narrow gap.
I grant her the space to work. I create a pocket with my arm, shielding her from the dripping blue fluid and the notched edges of the walls.
Standard tactical thinking says I should keep her behind me, yet the ship requires her hands.
I function as a weapon of mass destruction, but she provides the precision I currently lack.
"The blue cables are live," I warn. "The stabilizer is drawing power directly from the secondary core. Keep your distance from the housing to protect your nervous system."
"I’ve stripped power cores in the middle of a sandstorm, Draevik," she reveals, her fingers already dancing through the mess of wires.
I watch her. I grant her total control over the bypass, my eyes tracking every twitch of her nimble fingers.
I trust her judgment. She is beginning to understand the language of the ship’s guts as I do, spotting the smaller flickers of life in the decay where I once saw only a failure of maintenance.
She sees a loose coupling and tightens it with a quick flick of her wrist. She notices a frayed sensor wire and tucks it away from the moisture.
She is becoming part of the ship’s machinations.
She reaches for a discarded shard of plating on the floor of the shaft.
Using the sharp, indented edge of the stone, she shunts two of the glowing cables into a temporary bridge.
Her focus is absolute, and stubborn defiance etches itself into her expression—something I find increasingly captivating.
"Steady," I instruct gently, the word quivering in the small space.
"Got it," she gasps.
The stabilizer grinds, a deep, resonant noise that shakes the walls and rattles my very bones. A green light flickers on the ceiling, struggling against the darkness, and the sound of rushing air fills the shaft. It is the sound of the ship breathing again, Virex Prime alive within its hull.
"Pressure stabilized," she yells, a triumphant grin flashing in the dim light. She looks at me, her face streaked with grease and sweat, and the pride in her gaze exudes a physical heat.
"A necessary correction," I remark, though my focus is entirely on her.
Coordinating with a partner becomes a dance of touch and timing.
As I move forward, my large hand brushes her shoulder, signaling her to slide back into position behind me.
The thread inside me flares with a warm, constant approval.
She may have started off as a scavenger and survivor, but now, she is the secondary architect of my survival.
She has proven her utility through an intuitive connection to the very systems I was built to guard.
The ship’s internal map updates on my HUD. The galley is now a viable combat zone. I feel the shift in the ship’s gravity, the subtle realignment of resources as the auxiliary pump takes the load.
"You did well," I compliment, the words feeling heavy and unfamiliar in my throat.
"I told you I was more than a pretty face." A light, bell-like clarity hitches to the remark, ringing out in the narrow passage and momentarily masking the heavy dripping of water with its vibrant cadence.
"The path to the galley is clear." The red icons on my HUD transitioning to a dull, manageable amber. "Stay behind the plating when we breach the hatch. The boarders will be disoriented by the pressure shift, but they will still be armed."
"Just make sure you give me a clear shot," she responds, her grip tightening on the sidearm. She remains decisive. She prepares for the strike.
I lunge forward into the darkness of the next corridor.
My internal systems are still flagging errors, but for once in a thousand years, the tactical deficit is a burden I am choosing to carry.
I fight alongside a companion, playing the part of the storm while she acts as the spark that keeps my lightning focused.
We move deeper into the bowels of the vessel, two ghosts in the machine, ready to reclaim what belongs to us.
We pass through the hydroponics bay on the way to the galley access point. Or what remains of it.