After three full days locked up in our quarters tearing into each other, we finally decided it was time to leave and spend a little time around other people. Eve and I had lunch with some of our friends, Kianna, Tillia, Zyno and Yun, filling them in on Eveâs debriefing with the Lord Generals.
Same as me, they were all irritated high-command blamed Eve for every protocol breach, and same as Eve they thought the Lord Generals were all fools to already work on getting me out of the picture.
We didnât have any other orders except for me to finish my mission reports, so Eve helped me knock those out quickly. It was surprisingly mundane, writing out what happened day-to-day on Vyrane, and condensing it all made it seem so inconsequential. Lives ended down there, and yet everything could be neatly summarized in just a few dozen pages to be submitted and then forgotten. It certainly wasnât cathartic or healing, not like journaling my experiences like Doctor Jumomo suggested, instead it almost seemed to dimmish them.
We spent another few aimless days around
The Radiance
, completing some of our scheduled training as well with the trainers we had before in more simulations, but after being down planet-side in the middle of a real military operation, it made the sims all seem like a joke from that point. Still, the training was all required and backlogged, so we needed to get it done when we could, otherwise weâd probably end up in
another
disciplinary meeting.
Inbetween training and spending time with our friends, I also submitted several requests for a meeting with the Lord Generals. I wasnât exactly sure what I was going to say to them, let them know they couldnât get rid of me maybe, but after denying my first request they just ignored all the others after.
Despite being the handler to the most important mission asset, the Lord Generals clearly didnât consider me relevant at all, and it was obvious they were going to keep working to get me out of the picture so they would have Eve all controlled on their own.
After a cycle passed since we returned from Vyrane, we were summoned for a meeting to go over the details of our next mission.
âCanât believe weâve already got another target, seems like thatâs so soon.â I said mildly as we rode along the moving walkway down the hallway, both of us dressed in our comfortable day clothes as usualâme in my t-shirt, sweatpants and hoodie, Eve in her casual space clothes, a black and purple silken sweater dress that hugged her outrageous figure.
Eve had her arms wrapped around my waist and nuzzled her head into my chest, âDonât be so surprised, I have a feeling things will be moving much faster from now onâwonât be getting extended breaks between missions any longer.â She said.
I looked down at her face, âWhy do you say that?â
Eve just shrugged, then hugged tighter against me, âMultiple reasons; for one, enough time has passed my sisters will be establishing themselves with their nests, probably easier to track now. Aside from that we surely already have a backlog of targets and locations to check, even for the ones being more cautious and remaining camouflaged.â
I nodded along, âRight, I remember when we first came aboard
The Radiance
, the commanders told us they were able to track down roughly half of the Predazoans when they exited void space to at least the system they entered, maybe even the planet for a few.â
âStrike while the iron is hot, as the saying goes.â Eve added.
I put my arm around Eve and trailed my fingers along her back, âYou think itâs smarter to move quickly to the next available target as fast as we can, or should we wait so we can respond to more important threatsâlike with Vyrane nearly getting taken over?â
âI can see the reasoning for both options; we wait around too long and risk the Predazoans overtaking more planets, maybe even some reaching perfection. On the other hand, if they send us out on some long campaign, we might miss a more time sensitive or critical mission.â Eve looked up at me, âEither way, I would have no idea how our fool commanders are choosing our targets, no pattern at all I can discern.â
I started ticking off fingers, âEntana was a valuable core world, but Gamma-17 wasnât making much of a mess, so maybe they just chose that planet since our sensors were able to totally confirm she was there. Gamma-12 was pretty quiet in the Holistia Nebula, but they were concerned weâd lose her since there was so much interplanetary travel through that systemâworried weâd never be able to find her again. Of course, Vyrane makes total sense; Beta-09 was going to overtake an entire planetâcouldnât dick around with that one.â
Eve leaned forward to nibble on my arm, âNo need to speculate now, letâs see whatâs going on with this mission before we get too far ahead of ourselves.â
I pulled my arm away from Eve, âHey, no biting.â
Eve grabbed my arm and started nibbling on my hand again, âI want to bite.â
I took my hand away once more and flicked her on the nose, âYou canât always get what you want.â
With a hair-tentacle, Eve guided my hand forward and started sucking on my finger, being quite suggestive with it, âIsh thish okay?â She slurred.
I rolled my eyes, âRather you bite me than doâŠ
that
.â
Eve trilled a cute little giggle, âWhy, too stimulatingâtoo
arousing
?â
I pulled away and tugged on her hair-tentacle in a scolding manner, âAbsolutely, and donât even
try
to pretend thatâs not what youâre doing.â
Eve reached over, trying to get under the waistband of my pants, âI can always take care of it before we get to the meeting you know.â
I looked around to see the hallway was surprisingly empty as we rode along the moving walkway.
âFuck it, yeah letâs do it.â
Eveâs eyes lit up, âReally?â She asked, freeing my dick without a momentâs hesitation.
I shrugged, âWhy not? Iâm tired of playing along with the Lord Generalsâ rules. Might as well have some fun.â I looked down at Eve as she got to work, taking my breath away, âAnd really, what more can they even do to punish us now?â
Eve nodded her agreement, but her mouth was too busy to properly respond.
***
No surprise we were late for the meeting, but of course the detour was worth it. Eve and I strolled into the conference room trying to keep our giggles under control as we moved to the back of the surprisingly small room around a large long-table.
âThank you for taking time out of your
busy
schedule to meet with us.â Commander Durgo growled from the front of the room, his voice modulator over his insectoid face always able to portray his irritation despite the voice sounding so digitized.
I looked at the handful of people around us, âIs this really it?â
Weâd been to several debriefings and meetings over the course of the mission, and most had been in large command centers with an almost excessive audience. Here, there were eight people including us.
Commander Durgo and Lieutenant Bryx were up in front of the table, and before them were Agent Roote, the living-rock alien whoâd been with us on the Holistia Nebula mission, along with some female alien marine I didnât recognize. She was a rather large woman, very muscular and built up like some amazonian, a foot taller than me, with black skin that looked scaly, and an almost monstrous face; she had three blue eyes arranged in a triangle pointing inward, with a bald head that had several spikey ridges, and a mouth that had sharp pronged mandibles hidden behind several long tentacles that started where her nose shouldâve been, draping down to the top of her chestâlike a classic Cthulhu creature. Towards the middle of the table there was Zyno who was throwing me a smirkâknown for his habitual tardiness, he was clearly amused he beat us to the meeting. On the other side of Zyno was Doctor Hennor, another classic alien with bright blue skin and a weirdly bulbous head like a lightbulb, heâd been with us on the Vyrane mission.
Durgo glowered at me with those four red slits for eyes, âIf youâd been paying attention to the updates from high-command, youâd know weâre keeping things much more compartmentalized; debriefing for deploy teams will now only consist of the teams themselves; operations are going to be working with a strict need-to-know basis from now on.â
I looked around at the others in the room, âSeriously, this is all we have? We barely made it back from Vyrane with a group five times this size and just a handful survived.â
Zyno looked over at me, âWhat, you think you need more than my expertise to take out another Predazoan?â
I gestured towards him, âMore like Iâm worried you wonât be able to survive the mission without proper support.â
Bryx shook his wooly head, his trunk wiggly with him as though to accentuate his point, âThis mission will be different from our time on Vyrane; weâre going back to stealth tactics, need a smaller infiltration team to blend in.â He assured me.
Durgo activated his tablet to project a hologram of some star system, âWeâd prefer if youâd hold all your
brilliant
complaints until after the debriefing.â
Eve growled low in her throat, âWatch itâŠâ She threatened.
I noticed Eve had started getting more defensive over disrespect lately, even towards me. Sure, she was always prideful and wouldnât tolerate insults against her (how dare those lowly people disrespect such a godly being), but she had been taking insults against me rather personally too. I wasnât sure if it had to do with our time on Vyrane and what Almana did, making Eve more protective over how people treated us as a couple, or if it was because the Lord Generals were already trying to edge me out as her handler and wanted it clear she wouldnât tolerate thatâwouldnât accept anyone disrespecting me or my role in the mission, or maybe just my role as her boyfriend.
Whatever the reason, I couldnât help but admit I really enjoyed it; it was always important to have your partnerâs back, but Eve was taking it to a totally different level.
I leaned over and kissed her on the check, âThanks babe.â
She smiled at me, âOf course, darling.â
âMay I
continue
?â Durgo asked, looking beyond irritated now.
Eve waved at him dismissively, and he just sighed in responseâhis voice modulator hissing it out.
âWeâve been tracking Gamma-20 in the Derrion System with our long-range sensors all the way back from the destruction of NX-947b, after the Predazoans escaped through void space.â Durgo pressed a button and the hologram split apart showing zoomed in shots of a couple solar orbits and some gas giants, âItâs a rather derelict system, no habitable planets, but itâs incredibly resource rich. Still, weâve monitored Gamma-20 all the while, drifting through space along regular orbital pathways.â The hologram changed to show a highlighted orbit through a binary star system.
âGamma-20 appeared to be in some kind of stasis, staying far away from any other organic lifeforms, benignly orbiting through the system.â Bryx added.
âHowever, less than two cycles agoâwhile our teams were planet-side on Vyrane, we lost all trace of Gamma-20 on our long-rang scanners, and then a few days later a distress beacon went out from the deep space freighter,
Jessipie-90
.â Durgo explained, and the hologram changed once more to show a massive, bulky and blocky spaceship in the middle of nowhere.
Zyno leaned back in his chair, crossing his arms over his chest, âThe idea, I assume, Gamma-20 is the cause of the distress beacon?â
Bryx nodded, âThe deep space vessel was actually about to return home after a projected 20-year tour; it opened a warp gate, but it quickly destabilized and fried their warp reactors, leaving them stranded in the system.â
âWarp gates can be
destabilized
?â I pressed, worried I was about to discover
another
new space fear.
Zyno looked back at me, âA rare event, but incredibly dangerous; if the gate collapses into itself, itâll cause a reflection of dark matter radiation that can damage or even destroy some vessels. Worst case scenario, the gate collapses and
folds
into itself, then solidifies into a singularity that will eventually erupt intoâŠâ He tilted his head back and forth, âBasically, itâs like a temporary black hole that eventually explodes when it reaches critical mass with the dark matter radiation. That shit can destroy planets even, disrupt an entire solar system.â
My eyes nearly popped out of my head, âWhat? And we risk opening those gates when thatâs a possibility?â
Eve leaned her head on my shoulder, âStatistically, itâs so rare itâs not even considered a possibility, more like a random phenomenon.â She looked up at me with wide, innocent eyes, âThe chances of them occurring without external factors is so close to zero itâs almost negligible at that pointâa mathematical error.â
âBut it still
can
happen. And what does that mean
âwithout external factorsâ
?â I pressed.
âA warp reactor can be sabotaged to make the event more likely, weakening the structural energy reactions required to open a stable warp gate. Pirates have tried using destabilized gates as weapons in the past, but itâs so unreliable and volatile, only the dumbest or most desperate ever try it.â Zyno added.
Hennor held up a small blue finger to interject, âAlthough, research has suggested a warp gate is more likely to be destabilized if its within relative proximity of a previous unstable gate, whether it went critical or not.â He said in his gentle, demure tone.
âWhat kind of proximity are we talking?â I asked.
âApproximately one light year.â Hennor answered.
I looked up at Durgo, âAnd weâre planning on warping into the system that just had a destabilized gate? Are we running back-to-back suicide missions now or something?â I demanded.
âYour courage inspires us all.â Durgo said in a flat tone, then briefed a quick glance at Eve when she started growling, then just sighed and moved on quickly, âItâs our belief Gamma-20 waited for a warp gate to open and then caused the destabilization herself, purposefully stranding the vessel.â
I looked over at Eve, âYou guys can do that?â
She shrugged, âDonât see why not; considering we can open warp gates, makes sense we could half-ass it to create a destabilized one.â
âSounds like a risky maneuver, just like the pirates who try doing that; no guarantee a Predazoan could survive a destabilized warp gate singularity if things went worst-case scenario.â Zyno reasoned.
Eve smirked, âYouâd be surprised what we can survive.â
Before we could continue down another tangent, Bryx cleared his throat loudly, âLetâs get through this debrief first, then we can talk about random theoreticals.â
Everyone settled back down, and Bryx gestured for Durgo to continue.
Several more holograms appeared before us, all depicting the deep space vessel from various angles, including some blueprints or scientific specs, âAfter the initial distress beacon went out, some days later more distress beacons were sent, obviously all coded and with limited information, but the next few signals indicated thereâd been some mysterious deaths and disappearances on the vessel. Since the initial distress signal, six crew members have either been killed or are missing. Naturally, we suspect Gamma-20 is responsible.â Durgo explained.
The large marine woman up front raised her three-fingered hand, âAny particular reason no one has responded to the beacon in almost two cycles?â She asked, her voice deep and gruff but surprisingly feminine.
Durgo nodded once, âOur deep space sensor contained it, blocking it at the source from reaching anyone else.â
I rolled my eyes, âOh here we goâŠâ
Durgo fixed me with a flat glare, but continued with his explanation, âWeâve been closely monitoring the situation from the updates
Jessipie-90
has been sending out with their daily distress beacons; their life support is still functional, no concern over supplies, and the deaths have been spaced out evenly, looking like Gamma-20 is being careful not to overwhelm the crew all at once.â
âSheâs probably keeping them around as bait, hoping a rescue vessel will come soon, and sheâll probably attack them and consume that crew before she gets rid of all her bait.â Eve explained.
Agent Roote looked over at Eve, âWhy not just kill the whole crew and assimilate them, use those puppets to reel in rescue vehicles and assimilate them too?â
Eve leaned forward, steepling her fingers under her chinâlooking really cute with a thoughtful frown on her face, âShe must be conserving the biomass, being careful with itâmaybe needs the crew alive for some reason.â She looked up at Durgo, âWhatâs
Jessipie-90âs
cargo?â
Durgo pressed a button on his tablet, and a new hologram appeared, âKhrona crystals.â
Everyone groaned as though the answer was obvious.
The crystal looked rather plain, a random assortment of dark colors, but inside it seemed like there was some iridescent fire roiling around erratically.
âOf course.â Zyno shook his head.
I sighed, âAnyone want to explain things for the idiot from planet Earth?â
Eve swatted my shoulder and threw me a cute pout, âDonât insult my favorite boy.â
Zyno turned back to me, âKhrona crystals are probably the single most valuable resource in the Empire; they power void shielding and warp reactorsâtheyâre what allow ships to travel through void space.â He looked at Eve and nodded, âI know the Predazoans are all about consuming biomass, but Iâd hazard a guess they could find some use for khrona crystals too, right?â
Eve waved it off, âYes yes, we could drain them of their void energy, then supercharge any accumulated biomass.â She looked to me, âGamma-20âs supremacy drive is probably directing her to take a form of raw void energy, rather than some unique combination of biomass.â
Roote crossed his arms as he thought it over, âMaybe sheâs leaving people on the vessel alive until she absorbs the energy from the crystals first.â
Eve shrugged, âI have no idea what sheâs thinking; for all I know, she might have no interest in the people and only kills when they get in her way while working with the crystals. That, or maybe she needs to keep some balance between absorbed energy and consumed biomass.â She sighed, sounding frustrated, âHonestly, I canât even begin to guess what sheâs planning with this.â
I quirked up an eyebrow, âReally, this is so strange for a Predazoan?â
Eve gestured towards Zyno, âLike he said, weâre all about consuming biomass. Void energy is how we control or manipulate our biomass, itâs our spirit or soul, never thought it could join with our physical form tooâif thatâs what Gamma-20 is planning.â
I looked up at the hologram, âSo what exactly are these crystals? Why are they so special?â
Zyno stood up and walked over towards the hologram, âKhrona crystals are rare and hard to harvest as it takes so much time for them to mature, and thatâs why those freighters are out for years at a time.â He pulled out his tablet, and a hologram of a black hole joined the khrona crystal, âDespite what most people think, thereâs one thing that can escape the event horizon of a black hole, and thatâs dark matter radiation.â He gestured towards the weird light ring around the black hole, âAs a black hole consumes light, the dark matter radiation is actually
repelled
from the black hole, where itâll drift endlessly though space. Over time, the radiation will stabilize and eventually solidify into tiny particulates.â He moved the holograms around to show the freighter, gesturing to some massive tubes along the side of the bulky vessel, âThese freighters go out into deep space where there isnât life or even much travel, and they just drift around sucking up all the undisturbed particulates. Then, theyâre placed in a super-compressor that puts absolutely insane amounts of pressure on them, forcing them to converge. After several cycles in the super-compressor, youâll have yourself a complete crystal filled with pure dark matter energy. That energy is then used to power all the shit we need for void space travel.â He clicked off his holograms, âWithout them, it would be impossible.â
âAnd theyâre super rare too, right? No other way to harvest them, just takes time for them to mature and shit?â I reasoned.
âExactly, and thatâs why this is our next priority; this is one of the biggest freighters and one of the longer tours, and projections show they hold enough khrona crystals to power warp travel for the
entire
Empire for over 200 years
.â
Durgo explained.
âThe estimated value of the cargo is 8.2
quintillion
credits.â Bryx added.
Holy shit, how many zeroes was that? And they threw a fit over the collateral damage in the Holistia Nebula when it was just a few hundred trillion.
âOh, fuck meâŠâ Zyno put his head in his hands, looker greener than usual.
âThe only reason weâve waited this long in sending a team out is to continue gathering intelligence, confirm it was a Predazoan causing the trouble; we didnât want to risk getting involved with their tour if it turned out to be a false alarm.â Bryx explained.
âTo put it bluntly, if the Vyrane mission and this mission wouldâve been available at the same time, Adam and Eve wouldâve been sent to the Derrion System first.â Durgo added.
I threw my hands up in the air, âOver a few lousy credits, seriously? More value in money than in lives, is that it?â
Durgo fixed his four eyes on me, âMake no mistake, Agent Adam, fulfilling the Empireâs need for the energy required to sustain us for two centuries is more valuable than a
dozen
planets.â
I was about to bark out a scathing remark, but Eve put a hand on my shoulder and massaged it a little, calming me down quickly.
~Not the time, darling~
She vibrated to me.
Durgo pressed a button and the holograms changed to show another spaceship and a list of our undercover profiles, âNow that weâve told you all the basics of the mission, letâs go over the operational details.â