29. Nyra
NYRA
Hours of focused labor blur into a single, continuous adrenaline spike.
My fingertips fly across the console keys as we reshape the ancient vessel into our fortress.
We work in seamless unison to bridge the gap between my scavenger knowledge and his imperial expertise.
Every wire I splice and every code Draevik translates brings us closer, forging a partnership that feels as permanent as the mark on my skin.
Draevik stands over the primary tactical map, his massive hands resting on the console as he looks at me with a solemn, fierce intensity.
He declares that the ship is as much mine as his, officially handing me the authority over the internal defensive grid.
With a sharp nod of his head, he cedes the bridge's logic to my instincts, trusting me to be the brain while he acts as the sword.
The force of authority presses into my shoulders, solid and undeniable.
I have spent my entire life answering to other people's systems—Guild registries, Coalition trade protocols, and loan officers with dead eyes and faster fingers than mine.
Every override amounted to theft, performed on consoles belonging to someone else.
"This is the first time a vessel has opened its throat to me and said yours. The Ship permits more than my access. It leans into my commands, its ancient logic bending toward my inputs the way a current bends toward a drain. The distinction matters. Korr’s boarders are fighting a piece of hardware, but I am fighting alongside The Ship.
" I feel the reactor's drum in my wrists, the atmospheric pressure in my sinuses, and the hull temperature along my lower back. The ship is translating itself into sensations my body can parse. Suddenly, cracking the lock feels like a distant memory. Instead, the ship’s very architecture yields, pressing a key into my hand.
Taking active command of the internal systems to weave through the ship's logic, I lean into the light of the holographic displays, my eyes scanning the tactical overlays with a hunger I’ve only ever felt for a high-value salvage haul.
Beside me, Draevik stands like a pillar of ash and violet flame, his towering frame casting a long shadow across the command deck.
"Internal sensors are live." My report echoes in the vast chamber as the schematics bloom across the glass.
"Korr realizes watching from the sidelines isn't going to win him the ship.
He deployed hardened breaching pods straight from the Carrion King directly into Sectors Four and Five.
He's making a massive, final push. The new boarding parties are heavily armed and making a beeline toward the primary life support hub. "
Draevik’s eyes ignite with a terrifying intensity.
He speaks a single command in his native tongue.
From the dark bulkheads, the vessel's biomass extrudes newly forged plating, synthesizing a fresh shell over his tunic.
The armor locks into place with a series of sharp, metallic clacks.
He adjusts the seals on his pristine gauntlets, his machine-laced veins flashing with a periodic, low-light violet.
I feel his presence through the mark—a warm, golden thread deep in my mind that points straight to his heart.
We are a singular force, a grounded wire in a storm of our own making.
"He grows desperate as the jump gate nears." Draevik’s rumble thuds through the floor plates. "They want to choke us out, assuming we are still reeling from the reactor surge. Korr knows if he doesn't cripple us from the inside now, he loses his prize forever."
"Let them assume." A sharp, dangerous grin tugs at my lips.
A flicker on the secondary monitor catches my eye—an irregular spike in the data stream that smells like Selra's digital signature.
She must have seeded a dormant rootkit deep in the hull sensors before we purged her—a sleeper virus that only activated when Korr's reinforcements came within broadcast range.
She is hacking in again, her code trying to bypass the environmental seals.
I peer at her trap, a false loop designed to make us believe we have lost control of the oxygen scrubbers.
Part of our plan relies on this deception; we need them to feel they have the upper hand.
I let her code take hold of a dummy sector, watching the blips of the boarding party gain confidence as they advance.
I tap a sequence of override codes into the keypad, my movements fluid and precise.
Virex Prime groans in acknowledgement, its ancient gears grinding as the heavy blast doors at the far end of the ship slam shut.
I watch the invaders scramble as their path is suddenly cut off by a wall of impenetrable alloy.
"Turrets are primed.” My pulse echoes through me in a frantic, beautiful surge. "Draevik, leave the bridge and move down to the intersection of Sector Four. I’ll stay here on the cameras and flush them right into your path."
He turns to me, his predatory features softening for a fleeting second. His massive hand cups the side of my face. His thumb traces the sharp line of my cheekbone, a gesture of fierce pride and affection that makes the air around us feel thick and highly charged.
"You have mastered this ecosystem, Nyra," he whispers low enough for me to feel it through my ribs.
"It’s what a good scavenger does." I lean into his touch. "And right now, this ship is the only prize that matters."
I feel his resolve as if it were my own. He pulls away, his focus returning to the mission.
"I am moving to Sector Four," he declares. He turns and strides rapidly toward the exit. I watch as the heavy metal doors hiss shut behind him, sealing me safely inside the command center.
Pivoting back to the console interfaces, I bring up the internal thermal feeds.
On the monitor, his silhouette appears—a blazing violet icon descending through the central lift, the distance of decks keeping us apart.
As he travels, I spot a squad of heavily armored Korr soldiers breaching the maintenance shaft near his destination.
They move with a practiced, lethal intent, their pulse rifles scanning every shadow.
I recognize their tactics; they are following the standard Hegemony manual for ship reclamation.
On my screen, Selra attempts to shut down the automated defenses in that sector, but I’ve already rerouted command authority into a hidden subroutine outside her interface. I play along, letting the turrets power down for three seconds before I slam them back to life.
"They're using the ghost-route!" I shout into the open comms, trusting the bridge microphone to relay my words directly to Draevik down in the corridor. "They're expecting the automated defenses to be offline because of Selra’s interference. I’m giving them a surprise."
Bypassing the primary safety protocols—a move that would have terrified me days ago—now feels like a necessary step in our shared evolution.
Instead of using foam, I trigger the fire suppression system, but instead of foam, I vent a concentrated burst of coolant.
The temperature in the corridor drops instantly, the air turning into a white-hot needle of cold.
The soldiers stumble, their armor joints seizing up as the ice crystals form. I hear their frantic jabbering through the ship’s internal comms—a chaotic mess of fear and confusion.
On the secondary display, Selra's code scrambles to compensate.
I watch her logic try to reroute the climate controls, attempting to flush warm air back into the frozen corridor to thaw her soldiers before Draevik arrives.
She is fast. I will give her that. Her fingers are a ghost's, moving through the ship's subroutines with a familiarity that tells me she has been studying Reaper architecture for years, probably longer than I have been alive.
But she is fighting the ship from the outside, parsing its logic through a crude human interface that adds a half-second lag to every command.
I dive inside the ship's mind, and the ship is helping me.
Virex Prime flags her intrusion the moment it begins, highlighting the corrupted data packet in a bursting outline on my display like a cat dropping a mouse at my feet.
I isolate the packet and quarantine it before Selra's reroute can execute.
The warm air never arrives. The corridor stays frozen.
"They're slowed down." My eyes scan the feed for Draevik. "Sector Four intersection is clear. Take them, Draevik!"
On the monitor, his silhouette towers—a shadow drowning in a sea of his own violet fire.
He enters the corridor like a kinetic strike, his violet light so intense it leaves streaks of purple in my vision.
He moves with a grace that defies his size, his double-hearts beating in perfect synchronization with the visceral thud of my own.
He slams into the first soldier, his hands grabbing the ridges of the man's armor and tossing him aside like scrap metal. The air in the corridor is alive with static, his hair standing on end as his power warps the reality around him.
"Advancing," Draevik notifies with the roar of his power. "The line is holding. They are breaking!"
I feel a surge of fierce, burning joy. I view another squad flanking Draevik from the ventilation ducts. My salvage instincts scream a warning. I know those ducts; they are thin, covered with a specific alloy that becomes brittle when exposed to high-frequency vibrations.
"Draevik, look up!" The warning snaps like a live wire, a sudden surge of high-voltage energy that crackles through the corridor. "I'm collapsing the ventilation manifold!"