My Infinite System.

Chapter 210: "The Bazaar of a Thousand Suns,"



The Star-Jumper descended through a hazy, orange atmosphere, its chameleon hull deactivating to reveal the obsidian craft beneath. Below them stretched a sight none of them, save perhaps Lucian, had ever witnessed.

It wasn't a city; it was a chaotic, vibrant ecosystem of metal and flesh. Towers of woven crystalline growth spiraled next to structures of rusted iron plate. Vessels of every conceivable shape—organic pods, geometric shards, traditional thrust-ships—drifted in designated lanes or were docked haphazardly along sprawling landing platforms that stretched to the horizon. The air, filtered through the ship's systems, carried a wild cocktail of scents: sizzling spices, ozone, musk, and something vaguely like ozone.

"The Bazaar of a Thousand Suns," Reia said, her eyes scanning the scene with rapid, analytical precision. She took in the flow of traffic, the distinct commercial zones, the visible security patrols of hulking, multi-limbed aliens. "A neutral trade hub. No single jurisdiction. If you want to find something, or lose something, this is the place."

Lucian gave a single, curt nod as he set the ship down with a whisper-soft thump in a designated bay. "Kaelis's trail leads here. He's close. We look."

As the ramp hissed down, the full sensory wave hit them. The sounds were a cacophony of guttural languages, screeching hydraulics, and alien music that sounded like glass wind chimes in a storm. The sight was even more overwhelming.

Beings of every size and shape moved through the crowded thoroughfares. A creature with six insectoid legs and a translucent torso carried stacks of glowing crystals. A hulking brute with rocky, grey skin and a single central eye barged past, grumbling in a language that sounded like grinding stones. Elegant, bipedal figures with iridescent skin and large, dark eyes glided by, their robes shimmering.

"Whoa," Silas breathed, his head on a swivel. "Look at the size of that one! And that one—does it have three heads?" He pointed, not bothering to lower his voice. "Hey, what do you think that thing sells?" He gestured towards a stall where a tentacled being was hawking vials of swirling liquid.

"Silas, a little discretion," Reia murmured, though her own mind was cataloging every species, cross-referencing potential threats and capabilities.

Vyn simply observed, her shadows pulled tight, making her seem like a sliver of empty space moving through the crowd. Marc walked slightly apart, his expression unreadable, but his eyes were active, assessing exits, potential threats, and the sheer scale of it all.

Distracted by a floating vendor selling what looked like animated tattoos, Silas took a step back without looking. He bumped solidly into a large, reptilian alien covered in thick, green scales.

The alien whirled around, its vertical pupils slitting. It was a head taller than Silas and twice as broad. It let out a series of sharp, barking clicks and hisses, its crest flaring in clear aggression. It shoved Silas back, hard.

Silas, rooted to the spot by his own newfound power, didn't even budge. The shove that should have sent a normal man flying felt like a gentle tap. He just blinked. "Hey, watch it, pal."

The alien, seeing its show of force have zero effect, grew more agitated. It hissed louder, gesturing with claws that looked like they could shred steel. The crowd around them began to give space, sensing a fight.

"Hey, I don't speak... whatever that is," Silas said, holding his hands up peaceably, but his posture was still challenging. "You started it."

The alien took a menacing step forward, its barking language becoming more rapid and hostile.

Just as Silas was about to decide whether to just stand there and let the thing tire itself out or put it gently on the ground, Lucian appeared at his side.

Lucian didn't look at Silas. He faced the reptilian alien and began to speak. The sounds that came from his mouth were a perfect mimicry of the creature's own language—the same sharp clicks, the same guttural hisses. His tone was calm, conciliatory.

The alien stopped, its crest lowering slightly in surprise. It listened, then responded with a slower, less aggressive series of clicks.

Lucian nodded, replying again in that fluent, alien tongue. He made a slight, apologetic gesture towards Silas, then back to the alien.

After a moment, the alien snorted, a puff of steam erupting from its nostrils. It gave a final, dismissive click in Silas's direction and lumbered off, melting back into the crowd.

The immediate space fell quiet. Silas stared at Lucian, his jaw slightly slack.

"Whoa," he said again, this time in a hushed tone. "Since when do you speak... Lizard?"

"It's not 'Lizard'," Lucian said, his voice back to its normal flat tone. "It's a Draconid trade dialect." He turned to face the whole group, who were all watching him with varying degrees of surprise. Even Marc looked intrigued.

"How?" Reia asked, her analytical mind latching onto the new data point. "There are no records of you studying xeno-linguistics."

"It's part of the ability," Lucian explained simply. "Spatial comprehension isn't just about distance. It's about the space between concepts. Between words. I can... understand the shape of a language." He reached into a small pouch on his belt and pulled out five small, silvery devices that looked like curved communicator buds. "But you can't."

He handed one to each of them. "Universal translators. They'll sync with your auditory nerves. You'll hear everything in your native language, and you'll be understood when you speak."

Silas took his, turning it over in his fingers before pressing it against his temple as Lucian demonstrated. It adhered seamlessly. Suddenly, the chaotic noise of the bazaar resolved into understandable snippets.

"—best prices on Iridium coils, don't listen to that fraud down the way—"

"—my ship's grav-lifter is failing, I need a mechanic, not a philosopher!—"

"—and then he said my frill was unattractive! Can you believe—"

A slow grin spread across Silas's face. "Hey! I can understand the three-headed guy!"

Reia pressed hers on, her eyes widening almost imperceptibly as her mind was suddenly flooded with clear, structured data from the surrounding conversations. Vyn attached hers, the constant, low-level tension in her shoulders easing slightly as the alien world became slightly less alien. Marc hesitated for a second, then affixed the device. His eyes flickered around, processing.

Evelyn, already synced from the cockpit, gave a thumbs up. "Much better. Now I can actually tell if someone's cursing at us."

"Good," Lucian said, his gaze sweeping over them once more, a team now armed for communication. "The trail is near. Let's move. And try not to start an interstellar incident." He shot a look at Silas.

Silas just grinned, undeterred, now listening with fascination to an argument between a furry biped and a floating gelatinous cube about engine grease. As they moved back into the flow of the crowd, they were no longer just outsiders. They were listeners. And in a place like this, understanding was the most powerful weapon of all.


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