The Extra's Rise

Chapter 944: Allies on the Rim



North arrived first.

Two Windward sky-controllers stepped off their shuttle with clipped salutes and steady eyes. Not swordsmen—air traffic artists who keep a dozen lanes in their head and never let two ships share the same sky. They shook Kade's hand like equals, which bought them goodwill.

"Keep our launch windows clean if we whistle," he said.

"We already have them penciled," the taller one answered. "We'll erase if you don't need us."

East followed: three array scholars from Mount Hua—robes simple, eyes bright—and Elder Bai, who Seraphina bowed to without words. He bowed back. "We will not touch," he told Kade. "We will only look."

"Looking is the point," Kade said.

West landed with Jin and two Ashbluff techs who smelled like dust and old war. Jin's glance took in the crowns, the belt, the ghost skins, and came back to me. "Pretty," he said. "I brought boring people to break your pretty."

"Break what you can," I said.

South sent Captain Vyr with a Redeemer cadre. They parked their lanterns like small suns and stood where Rachel pointed. "We watch lane behavior," Vyr said. Rachel nodded, and that was that.

Central arrived last: a Slatemark logistics unit led by a woman who could load an army with a whisper, plus a judge with a neat collar and a polite frown. Rose met the judge halfway and handed over a one-page writ: observer rights, line rules, no interference clauses.

He read it, signed it, and stood exactly where she told him to. Smart.

We walked the rim together. No speeches. I pointed at pillars and said what they did in one sentence. Kade explained the lattice in two. Seraphina showed an ice drift-wall so small you'd miss it if you blinked. Reika drew a single character in the air for the group—Enough—and let it fade. Cecilia made heat wobble for one second and then stop. Rose folded a thumb of space and unfolded it without anyone feeling sick. Rachel ignored the judge's frown and built Redeemer caches along the observation line anyway.

"Okay," I said. "You've looked. Now you try to fool it."

I gave them a clean lane and a timer.

North went first. The sky-controllers pushed a silent disturbance across the belt—tiny shifts across a long arc, timed like a drumline. The lattice felt it, smoothed, and didn't call a tooth. Kade nodded once. "Good control," he admitted. Then he flicked a setting none of them saw, and the lattice revised its sensitivity by a fraction without getting twitchy.

East tried next. The scholars wrote a classical Mount Hua array in the air over three nodes, sending a humble "hello" that most systems would misclassify as weather. Seraphina smiled before the lattice tagged it. "Our ice said no," she told them. They smiled back, delighted to lose to ice.

West's techs made a mess— on purpose. They seeded the ground with sympathetic crumbs, set a decoy chatter at the edge of a ghost pillar's skirt, and waited for our system to argue with itself. It didn't. Rose had taught the ghosts to ignore each other unless touched twice in sequence. The techs groaned and clapped anyway.

South's Redeemers walked a slow loop with their lanterns latched. Rachel asked them to give no light and all patience. The lattice didn't twitch. Vyr smiled, tiny. "Your line knows friend from foreign without being trained to faces," she said. "Good."

Central's logistics lead didn't touch arrays. She walked supply lines, shook her head at two, rerouted one pallet train with three gestures, and told Kade where we would trip a stretcher if someone panicked. He fixed it in five minutes and thanked her like she'd saved his life.

The judge observed and didn't speak.

We reset. "Round two," I said. "Harder."

Jin took this one. He borrowed two Redeemer lanterns and a scholar's chalk and built a false rescue under a false collapse, timing each beat to a heartbeat and a lie. It looked real. It sounded real. It fooled two young guards at the line.

The lattice tagged the pattern in under two seconds.

One tooth woke, drew a line the length of a blink, and slept. Reika's character Enough flashed once in air above Jin's trick and vanished. Cecilia applauded, because of course she did.

Jin laughed. "Okay. You built this to make me work."

"That's the job," I said.

We were walking back when the belt's hum got rough. Not grit. Pressure. A wide sweep, slow, long, and hungry, coming over the far side. No filaments this time. A dish. Big.

Every head turned toward the same dark edge.

"Scan," North said at once.

"Of course," Rose said. "Not ours."

"How hard?" Vyr asked.

"Hard enough to tug at the ghosts if we let it," Kade said, already drawing lines on the paper map.

"Teeth?" Reika said.

"Not yet," I said. "If it's a dish, its first pass is for baseline."

Rachel moved before I told her to. "Lanterns here, here, here," she said, and her Redeemers set three points like stitches along a wound that hadn't opened yet.

Erebus' voice came from nowhere and everywhere. "I can make a thin roof," he said. "Polite. Not war."

"Do it," I said. "Only where the sweep will try to read."

He draped a membrane of bone over a long arc of the mare. It didn't block signal. It muddied intention. The scan washed over it and came away with a sketch that looked like a child's drawing of a map.

The pressure built for one more breath.

"Now they nudge," Rose said.

The scan shifted into a secondary mode. The ghosts hummed once, per lesson, then shut up. The lattice adjusted its "note" without a jump. Kade's pencil moved across the map like he was playing a quiet instrument.

"Teeth on corners, low," he said.

"Wake two," I ordered.

Two stones unfolded one petal. Two lines drew. Not beams. Edits. The scan's edge lost definition and then lost interest.

It pulled back.

We held position for count of thirty.

No return pass.

"Not a mind," Seraphina said. "A machine."

"Send the courtesy," I told Elias. "Far-side dish read. No impact. Our reply was polite."

"North says they saw it too," Elias replied. "They'll throw chaff in high orbit lanes if it repeats. West says 'we owe you a beer.' East asks for the trace. South says their ward sea buzzed in sympathy for a second and then smoothed. Central asks if their dead satellite is still safe."

"It is," Kade said without looking up.

The judge cleared his throat. "On behalf of Central, consider this a formal commendation for restraint."

Rose gave him a look that said don't make it a speech. He wisely stopped.

I looked at the visitors. "Thank you for trying to break us."

"Next time we'll do it better," Jin said.

"I hope so," I answered. "It keeps us honest."

We didn't end with clapping or a debrief monologue. We split into small knots. North set up a shadow desk near Kade to sync launch windows. East walked with Seraphina to the ice flags and started asking smart questions. West's techs traded quiet notes with Erebus about bone etching and dampening fields. South's Redeemers compared cache contents with Rachel and swapped tricks for keeping hands steady when people scream. Central's logistics lead moved a pallet train again without asking anyone, because she was right.

I stepped to the rim with Reika and watched Earth hang over Tycho. The belt hummed. The ghosts slept. The teeth were quiet.

Reika didn't look at me. "You're thinking about the next thing," she said.

"Always," I said.

"Good," she said. "We'll be ready."

The hum under our boots shifted a hair. Not danger. Just the system learning that many eyes had looked at it and liked what they saw.

"Next drill," Kade called from behind us. "Three minutes."

We turned and jogged back to the line.


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