The Foxfire Saga

B1 | Ch. 19 - Interlude in Captivity: The Weight of Being Seen



Akiko stirred, her head swimming with the lingering haze of exhaustion. Her limbs felt heavy, as though her body had been dragged through fire and left to cool in ash.

Which, in a way, it had.

Fragments of memory drifted back in pieces: the writhing dark of the frigate entity, the flood of impossible magic, the flicker of triumph, then nothing.

Her eyes fluttered open.

A harsh ceiling met her gaze. Gray, utilitarian, unfamiliar. The faint hum of machinery vibrated through her bones.

Medical bay. Still on the Sovereign.

She tried to sit up, and stopped short. A tug of resistance. Cold metal.

Her gaze snapped to her wrist. A cuff.

She gave it an experimental pull. The chain clinked softly but held firm.

Her other wrist was free, but the restraint and the taut medical harness kept her pinned. Tightly.

A cold knot settled in her stomach.

They knew.

Before she could process further, a voice cut through the silence.

"You're awake!"

She flinched.

Anna floated into view, bracing on a nearby rail, face bright with relief.

"I was so worried," she said, drifting closer. "You've been out for days, and no one would tell me anything. I kept sneaking back in when I could."

Akiko opened her mouth, but something shifted at her side.

A flick of movement. Soft. Familiar. Her tail. It curled instinctively around her waist, brushing against her arm with protective ease.

A curse slipped out before she could stop it.

She sighed. "How long was I out?"

Anna's levity dimmed as the question played out into the silence around them.

"A couple days," she said quietly. "You were in bad shape when they brought you back. I kept checking in."

Akiko shifted again, the cuff clinking as she moved. "What are people saying?"

Anna glanced down, her fingers fiddling with the edge of a rail. "It's... complicated. You scared the hell out of a lot of people. Cassandra's been on edge since the debrief. Hayes asked the captain if you should be... locked up."

Akiko let out a bitter laugh. "Well. Guess I missed the vote."

She lifted her cuffed wrist, letting the chain rattle.

Anna flushed, sheepish. "Yeah, about that... I think it's just temporary? Caution, you know? You did kind of... catch fire."

Akiko groaned and let her head fall back against the pillow. "Great."

Silence stretched between them.

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"Anna," she said softly, "you shouldn't be here."

Her voice was firm. "If they think I'm dangerous, being near me could land you in trouble."

Anna crossed her arms.

"Too late," she said. "Besides, I don't care what they think. You're my friend."

Akiko blinked.

Friend. It was such a small word. She hadn't expected to hear it. Especially not now. Especially not after the tail, the fire, the silence that must've followed.

Her ears twitched again, betraying the surge of emotion she didn't dare show.

But Anna didn't flinch. Her hand rested on Akiko's arm, a solid comfort.

Eventually though, she had to return to her duties. With a gentle squeeze and quiet words of support, she departed, slipping through the hatch into the medical deck proper.

The door sealed behind her with a soft hiss.

After that, time slipped past in uneven fragments.

Akiko exhaled slowly, eyes on the ceiling, the quiet hum of the medical bay pressing in like a held breath. Without Anna's chatter, the silence gnawed.

Her thoughts drifted in aimless circles. Half-formed escape plans. Bitter hypotheticals. The kind of mental pacing that left her more exhausted than when she'd started.

Her free hand traced shapes in the air. At first, it was idle. A fidget.

But soon, her finger began sketching runes.

They weren't glowing. No mana, she didn't want to risk the crew getting spooked. Just motion and memory. The images burned into her mind by the entity's magic, half-learned, half-stolen.

The first one came out lopsided. Too fast. She sighed and erased it with a wave of her hand.

Kaede's voice, a whisper from an old lesson, surfaced uninvited. Precision matters.

Akiko had always cared more for flash than structure. Now all she had was the structure.

She tried again.

This time, the rune curved cleanly. The intersecting points aligned just right. It still wasn't perfect, but close enough to be satisfying.

She moved on to another. More complex, layered. Her finger hovered midair, pausing as she tried to reconcile its chaotic elegance. The entity's logic had shaped this one. Machine-like. Alien.

The rune didn't belong in a sterile medbay. It was wild, unfinished. But it was hers now. Claimed in fire, bound by will.

Her thoughts drifted to the fight. The foxfire blade. The way her magic had coalesced. Impossible, instinctive, and hers.

The hum of the equipment faded as she lost herself in the rhythm of invisible motion, one rune after another. For the first time in what felt like days, she felt a flicker of peace.

She was midway through an especially intricate pattern when a voice interrupted her quiet.

"Practicing your art, I see."

Akiko jerked, her hand freezing mid-stroke.

Dr. Calloway floated just inside the doorway, a datapad tucked beneath one arm. Her expression was tired amusement, but the weight in her eyes was impossible to miss.

"Maybe not the wisest move right now," Calloway said, nodding toward Akiko's raised hand. "You're already under enough scrutiny."

Akiko sighed and dropped her hand. The phantom lines vanished from the air, but not from her mind. "I was bored," she muttered. "Not a lot of entertainment when you're chained to a bed."

Calloway smiled faintly. "Fair enough. Still, I'd keep the performance art to a minimum for now."

She drifted closer and latched onto a nearby support rail.

Akiko tilted her head, curious. "So, how bad is it? Am I getting tossed out the nearest airlock, or do I get a trial first?"

Calloway exhaled, a soft, tired sound. "Depends who you ask."

She hesitated before continuing. "Cassandra Holt and Jonathan Hale see you as a threat. Hayes... is Hayes. He wants containment, maybe worse. For security."

Akiko groaned, eyes rolling toward the ceiling. "Let me guess. Cassandra's leading the charge, shouting about infiltration and espionage?"

"Loudly," Calloway said. "But Ward hasn't made a call. That's good news. She's holding the line."

"Yeah, great. So my best option is to lie here, twitching my tail, while they debate whether I'm an enemy asset."

"Not quite." Calloway's tone softened. "You've already proven you're willing to help. That still matters."

Akiko's ears flicked before she caught herself.

"What about you?" she asked, quieter. "Where do you stand?"

Calloway didn't look away. "In your corner. For what it's worth. But you've made powerful people nervous. That doesn't go away easily."

Akiko gave a humorless chuckle. "Story of my life."

Calloway glanced down at her datapad. "Ship repairs are progressing. Engineering's ahead of schedule."

She looked up again. "And we recovered one of the drones. Mostly intact."

Akiko raised an eyebrow. "Really? Any luck with the puzzle?"

Calloway's expression tightened. "Not yet. According to Rourke, it's 'straight out of pulp fiction.' No one knows what makes it tick."

Akiko's gaze drifted. "Let me guess. Runes?"

"Plenty," Calloway said. "But no one knows how to read them. It's like trying to decipher a language we've never heard spoken."

Akiko didn't answer right away. Her fingers moved across the blanket, tracing silent lines.

She could help. She knew that. But she doubted they'd let her anywhere near it.

Not until something worse forced their hand.


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