Chapter 209: A Little Mistrust
The Star-Jumper slid through the void, a sliver of darkness in an ocean of light. Inside, the silence was a living thing, thick and heavy.
Marc sat in one of the rear harnesses, his head resting against the cool bulkhead, eyes closed. He wasn't sleeping. He was just still. He could feel the weight of their stares like a physical pressure. Silas's gaze was a blunt instrument, straightforward and distrustful. Reia's was a scalpel, precise and analytical. Vyn's was a chill fog, seeping into the corners of the compartment. He didn't react, didn't open his eyes. He just breathed, in and out, a steady rhythm against the ship's faint hum.
Reia watched him from her seat, her fingers steepled under her chin. In the space behind her eyes, a thousand scenarios unfolded with cold, brutal clarity. Scenario 47: He attempts to seize control of the power core. Response: Silas engages physically, I sever the neural connection to his motor functions, Vyn contains the thermal backlash. Probability of success: 99.8%. She ran the calculations again, and again, each iteration a perfect, bloodless dance of subjugation. Her intellect, a newly vast and silent ocean, found no flaw in her plans. He was a variable, and she was mapping every possible equation he could create.
Silas stood near the weapons locker, arms crossed. His body felt like a coiled spring, thrumming with a power so profound it was almost uncomfortable. He remembered the feeling of his ribs cracking under Marc's blows just days ago. Now, he knew with absolute certainty that the same impact wouldn't even make him flinch. He watched the steady rise and fall of Marc's chest, measuring him. Let him try something, Silas thought, the raw, physical certainty a solid weight in his gut. Just let him try.
Vyn didn't bother with scenarios or physical posturing. She simply let her awareness, now intricately woven with the fabric of magic itself, rest upon Marc. She felt the low, controlled simmer of his thermal energy, a contained star. She could feel the space around him, could twist it, freeze it, or unravel it with a thought. Her shadows weren't just around her; they were in the very air he breathed, waiting for a single, wrong twitch of intent.
Evelyn, from the co-pilot's chair, monitored the ship's systems with a mind that could now process the entire data stream at once. Part of her consciousness was also dedicated to Marc's bio-signs. Heart rate, respiration, thermal output. All stable. Too stable, perhaps. She had a thousand virtual copies of herself running simulations on his potential threat level, all concluding the same thing: he was immensely dangerous, and his compliance was an unquantifiable risk.
Lucian was the only one not staring. He piloted the ship, his movements efficient and calm. But he was aware of everything. The tension in Silas's shoulders, the focused stillness of Reia, the predatory patience of Vyn. He could feel the four distinct, colossal auras of his team, now burning with the intensity of newborn stars, all oriented toward the one quiet, contained flame in the back of the ship.
Hours bled into one another. The only sounds were the hum of the engine and the soft, electronic chirps from the cockpit.
It was Silas who finally broke the silence, his voice a low rumble that vibrated in the enclosed space. "So. You just heal up fast, or what?"
Marc didn't open his eyes. "Something like that."
"Convenient," Silas grunted.
"Necessary," Marc replied, his tone devoid of emotion. "Eron didn't tolerate weakness. A broken tool is a discarded tool."
Reia saw the opening, a chance to probe. "And what does a tool do when its wielder is gone?" she asked, her voice deceptively mild.
For the first time, Marc opened his eyes. He looked at her, then at Silas, then at the back of Lucian's head. His black eyes were unreadable pools. "It finds a new purpose. Or it becomes scrap." He let the words hang for a moment. "I'm not ready to be scrap."
Vyn spoke from her shadowed corner, her voice like dry leaves. "Purpose is a choice. Not a default state."
Marc held her gaze. "I know."
The exchange was a verbal feint, a testing of guards. No one had moved, but the air crackled with unspoken challenges.
Lucian finally spoke, his voice cutting through the tension without raising in volume. "The trail is getting stronger. Kaelis is close to the source. We'll be there in a few hours." He didn't turn around. "Get ready."
It was a dismissal and an order. The silent vigil was over, for now.
Reia leaned back, closing her own eyes. Scenario 112: Cooperative engagement against an unknown foe. Integration of thermal-based assets with minimal team coordination. Probability of success: 78.3%. Margin of error: unacceptable. She began running new simulations.
Silas uncrossed his arms and started methodically checking the seals on his combat gear, the motions smooth and powerful.
Vyn's shadows retreated, coalescing around her until she was just a woman sitting in a chair, though the air around her still felt thin and cold.
Evelyn returned her full focus to the star charts, plotting a dozen different exit strategies simultaneously.
Marc watched them for a moment longer, taking in the seamless, terrifying efficiency of it all. They were more than they had been in the vault. Sharper, brighter, more. He could feel it. He closed his eyes again, the ghost of a frown on his face. He had thrown his lot in with something far beyond the petty wars of the Thorne estate. He was adrift in a sea of gods, and he was just a man with a fire in his chest.
The Star-Jumper flew on, a needle of silent intent hurtling towards a storm. And inside, five powerful beings and one wild card prepared for a war none of them could fully comprehend.
A/N
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