The rebel command center, if one could call a partially collapsed observatory a center, buzzed with purpose. Power flickered on overhead screens as Lyne outlined the next operation.
"We have a sixty-hour window before Mairee's remnant security AI launches a data sweep on the Echo Ring. If we want to salvage what's left of Astra's old intel cache, we move tonight."
Damien leaned against a pillar, arms crossed. "And the likelihood they're expecting us?"
"High," Lyne admitted. "But we have something they don't—insiders."
Elara exchanged a look with Jeren. He gave her a tight nod.
"I'll lead the infiltration," Jeren said. "I know the layout. We can hit the relay, secure the core, and be out before sunrise."
Elara watched him closely. "You sure you're ready?"
His voice was steady. "I've waited two years to take something back from them. Let me do this."
After the meeting, Elara found Damien alone, sharpening a combat blade by firelight.
"You don't trust Jeren," she said quietly.
"I don't trust sudden changes of heart," he replied. "He saw us as enemies for too long."
Elara knelt across from him. "He's my brother."
"And I'm the man you were forced to marry."
Her eyes flared. "That's not what I—"
Damien held up a hand. "I know. It's just... you and I built something real under impossible circumstances. Let's not forget how fragile that is."
She nodded slowly. "That's exactly why I believe in him. Because I've seen what people become when they lose everything, and still choose to fight."
Damien looked at her for a long moment, then slid the blade into its sheath. "Then let's hope your belief is enough."
The infiltration team, Jeren, Nova, Kira, and two engineers slipped through the ash fields under the veil of darkness. Damien and Elara remained behind, coordinating backup and escape routes.
Communications crackled intermittently. The closer the team got to the Ring, the stronger the interference.
Jeren's voice came through: "Inside the main artery. Resistance minimal. Reaching the vault door."
Elara's pulse quickened. "Minimal resistance? That's not right."
Damien tapped the table. "Too clean. Could be a trap."
Moments later, static surged. Then a scream.
"Kira! KIRA!" Nova shouted over the line.
"Abort," Elara barked. "Everyone fall back!"
Jeren's voice came again, quiet, broken. "They knew\... They knew we were coming."
The survivors limped back to base. Nova was carrying Kira, unconscious but alive. Jeren bled from a gash over his eye.
"They set a trip mine near the server's base," he said. "We barely escaped."
Damien stood rigid. "They weren't just ready. They used our old access codes. Ones only inner circle operatives would know."
Everyone turned to Jeren.
His face was pale. "You think I gave them?"
"Did you?" Damien snapped.
"No! I wouldn't—"
Elara stepped between them. "That's enough! We don't have time to unravel trust with guesses. Let Kira recover, and then we'll know."
Nova nodded. "I caught a glimpse of the detonator signature. It wasn't Jeren's. But it was someone from the old grid. Someone who knew Astra's files."
A heavy silence followed.
Damien muttered, "Then we have a mole."
That night, Elara sat alone in the observatory, moonlight dancing across old star maps. Damien joined her, setting down two mugs of synth-brew.
"We haven't had a moment to breathe in days," he said.
"I know. I miss Astra. I miss what we were before all this."
He took a sip. "You were always this. Strong. Stubborn. The fire in the middle of ruin."
She smiled faintly. "And you were always the enemy I couldn't hate."
He turned to her. "What are we now, Elara?"
She looked into his eyes. "We're what happens when forced choices become real ones."
He leaned forward. So did she. The kiss they shared wasn't desperate, or rushed.
It was honest.
Morning broke. Lyne returned with a decoded transmission.
"We intercepted this from the Mairee archives before the breach. You'll want to see it."
On screen appeared Astra's face. Recorded weeks before her death.
"If you're seeing this, I failed. But that doesn't mean you have to. Elara, Damien, if you're still fighting, know this: Mairee's weakness isn't just in her data. It's in her arrogance. Use that."
"And if Jeren found you, trust him. He saved me once. He'll save you too."
The message ended.
Elara wiped her eyes. Damien simply placed a hand on her shoulder.
Jeren, in the corner, stood straighter.
"Then let's bring her legacy home," he said.