The air in the Omni-Stellar conference room was chilled and sterile, smelling of recycled air and anxiety. The wall was a single, seamless viewscreen showing a silent, rotating logo. Around the polished black table, three figures sat under the harsh glow of overhead lights. Jax Vellor, Head of Planetary Security, a man with a jaw so tight it looked carved from stone, stared at the two security officers standing stiffly before the table. The lead guard, Goran, shifted his weight, his hammerhead face slick with sweat. "Let me make sure I understand this," Vellor said, his voice dangerously quiet. He tapped a finger on the table. "A child. A Cerebrian orphan with no combat training, no resources, and a data cube that could trigger sector-wide sanctions... managed to not only evade your team but was then openly protected by a group of off-worlders in the middle of a crowded thoroughfare. And you... retreated." Read full story at đđđđžđ â˘đżđđđžâ˘đđžđ Goran cleared his throat. "Sir, the situation was non-standard. The individuals displayed... significant capabilities. One of them, a large male, was physically impervious. A female neutralized our weapons with some form of cryogenic field. They were clearly augmented or... other." From the other side of the table, Lena Karr, the sharp-faced Director of Legal Affairs, let out a derisive sniff. She didnât look up from her datapad. "Significant capabilities." She repeated the words as if they were a joke. "So your official report will read that the Varros Security Division was scared off by a few tough-looking tourists?" "It wasnât like thatâ" the other guard started. "It was exactly like that!" Vellor slammed his palm on the table, the sound cracking through the room. "You were outplayed and you ran. You let a walking liability, holding the proof of our gross negligence on Karys-7, slip into the hands of unknowns. Do you have any idea what happens if that data gets to a neutral comms buoy? Or worse, a rival corp like Helios Division?" The third executive, a stout man named Rourke who oversaw External Operations, finally spoke. He had a calm, weary demeanor that contrasted with Vellorâs fury. "Scaring them wonât change the facts, Jax. The problem exists. The question is how we contain it." He steepled his fingers. "These âoff-worldersâ. Any identification? Ship registry?" Goran shook his head, grateful for the shift in focus. "Nothing. Their ship is... strange. Non-standard design. No transponder signal. Itâs like it doesnât want to be seen." "Perfect," Karr muttered, scrolling through legal precedents on her pad. "So weâre dealing with ghosts who have a moral compass. The worst kind." Vellor leaned back, his eyes burning into Goran. "I want every camera feed from that sector analyzed. I want facial recognition run against every bounty hunter, mercenary, and do-gooder in the sector database. I want to know who these people are." He pointed a finger. "And I want that girl found. Before she talks. Before that data walks out of this system." "The Drifting Leaf," the other guard blurted out. "We tracked their heat signatures back to that inn. The organic one in the old quarter." Rourke nodded slowly. "Good. Thatâs a start. But we donât send your bruised security team back in for a rematch." He looked at Vellor. "This requires a lighter touch. If theyâre protectors, theyâll be guarding her. A direct assault could force them to release the data out of spite." "So whatâs your brilliant suggestion?" Vellor snapped. "We donât take the girl," Rourke said calmly. "We give her a reason to come to us. And we donât fight the protectors. We make them irrelevant." Karr looked up, a predatory gleam in her eye. "Leverage. The girl is a Cerebrian. Her entire world was her parents. But if we canât use them..." She tapped her datapad. "Thereâs an uncle. Maternal. Lives on a farming moon in the next system. He petitioned for custody after the accident. We denied it, citing stability concerns." A slow, ugly smile spread across Vellorâs face. The rage was replaced by a cold, calculating cruelty. "Bring him in. Quietly. Offer him a reunion with his beloved niece. All he has to do is convince her to come home... and bring daddyâs little data cube with her." Rourke nodded in approval. "A family matter. No messy corporate fingerprints. The off-worlders canât stop a family member from taking custody. Itâs... clean." "Itâs not clean, itâs messy and emotional," Karr corrected, but she was smiling too. "Which is why it will work. The girl will be desperate for any connection to her past. Sheâll trust him." Vellor stood up, his decision made. "Do it. Get the uncle. Prep a transport. And you two," he said, his gaze falling back on the shamed guards, "are on dock duty until I decide if youâre worth the oxygen youâre breathing. Get out of my sight." The two guards practically scrambled from the room. The door hissed shut, leaving the three executives in the sterile silence. "This is a contained problem," Vellor said, more to himself than the others. "We contain it, we move on." Rourke stood, smoothing his jacket. "Letâs just hope these âghostsâ donât believe in haunting people." As they filed out, the Omni-Stellar logo continued its silent, endless rotation on the screen. The machine was in motion. It had stumbled, but it was now recalibrating, finding a new, more insidious way to crush the small spark of defiance that had dared to challenge it. The game had just shifted from a street chase to a psychological siege. The common room of the Drifting Leaf was bathed in the soft, pulsing glow of the living walls. Marc leaned back in his chair, a faint, almost imperceptible smile touching his lips as he watched Reia pour over star charts on her datapad. "You know," he began, his voice a low rumble. "That kid, Lira. Sheâs sharp. Seriously sharp. I swear, if she had a few more years on her, she might just give you a run for your credits, Reia." Reiaâs head snapped up, her eyes narrowing. She didnât say a word, but the icy glare was enough. "Hey, come on," Silas cut in, instantly defensive. He gestured with a thumb towards his sister. "No kidâs beating Reia. Sheâs just... working with what sheâs got here. Itâs not a fair fight." Marcâs smile widened a fraction. "Thatâs my point. The kid had nothing. No tech, no team, no backup. Just her own brain and a desperate need for the truth. And she still pulled it off." He looked back at Reia, the challenge clear in his eyes. "Makes you think, doesnât it?" Reia held his gaze for a tense second, then deliberately looked back down at her datapad, her fingers resuming their swift, precise movements. "Donât have to think," she said, her voice cool and clipped. "I have results."
