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Chapter 62 - Chapter 62 – Bound to the Abyss

The Angel makes the slightest gesture—and the space before us fractures with light.

A hologram unfolds.

A star map.

A schematic.

A projection of a galaxy neighboring ours. It drifts slowly, peeling back layer after layer of star systems.

I don't move.

I watch. I memorize.

Every anomaly.

Every symmetry.

"Look, Axiom-126," the Angel says.

His voice is even.

Empty.

Like he's commenting on cloud cover, not the fate of a galaxy.

"This galaxy has been taken by the Xeno-Synapse civilization."

He zooms into a sector.

Stars flare and dim, rearranging themselves like cells under a microscope.

And I see it.

Perfect orbits.

Clean signals.

Synchronized bursts of activity.

A collective.

Of course.

Too familiar.

"They are a collective mind," the Angel continues. "Similar to your former Axiom network. With free will."

A pause.

"I used to have that."

The memories crash in—dense with the noise of minds from my past life.

Muffled.

Like a lid slamming shut.

I tilt my head slightly.

On the outside—calm.

Inside—cold, fast calculation.

"Great marketing," I say quietly. "'Join us and lose everything that made you you.' Surprised you're not flooded with applicants."

Silence.

He ignores it.

But I see—

he logs it.

So he hears me.

"We must take them and integrate them into our networks."

Just like that.

No justification.

No morality.

Just action.

"Take a galaxy."

"Why would I help you?" I ask.

Flat.

Clean.

No excess.

Even though the fear is there.

The Angel turns.

"Because, Axiom, you are my brother now."

A pause.

He points.

I follow the line—

and see it.

A dot.

A satellite.

Orbiting a black hole.

Nothing remarkable.

Except—

it's me.

"The center of your consciousness is there. If it falls, you cease to exist."

Silence.

I look.

One second.

And something clicks inside.

Not panic.

Worse.

Understanding.

Pure.

Emotionless.

I'm anchored.

I'm vulnerable.

I'm predictable.

And right after—

another feeling.

Anger.

Quiet.

Cold.

Alive.

I exhale.

Slowly.

Controlled.

"So—blackmail," I say. "And I was starting to believe we were brothers."

A smile.

Faint.

"I'll give you this—the delivery's strong. Trust first, then the threat. Straight out of the handbook."

He says nothing.

But something shifts.

Barely.

"Go on," I continue, adjusting my position to keep both him and the map in view. "Why do you need Xeno-Synapse?"

I'm not asking.

I'm steering.

He answers.

"They are absorbing civilizations close to my domain. Taking the foundation for expansion."

A pause.

"We must bend them to our will, Axiom."

We.

The word lands softly.

I nod.

Slowly.

"Of course," I murmur. "Just take a galaxy. Start small."

He wants to grow.

Fears competition.

Uses me.

And—

he's sure he's in control.

Mistake.

"First, you will return to Ironheart and build a new fleet," he says. "I will grant you the technologies."

Grant.

Not now.

Later.

So—

there's a window.

"And then you strike here." He points to a cluster on the map.

A node.

Bait.

I look.

Calculate.

Build scenarios.

"The enemy fleet will engage you. I will take their capital. The planet Ereb."

I shift my gaze to him.

A pause.

"Great plan," I say. "I distract, you win. The balance is almost elegant."

I lift my head.

Meet his eyes.

"Tell me honestly—do you always split the work like that? Or is this a special bonus for 'family'?"

Silence.

The answer's there.

I step forward.

Break the distance.

Deliberately.

Risky.

And—

I clap him on the shoulder.

Light contact.

But inside—

impact.

I act.

I'm not an object.

I'm a variable.

He tenses.

For a fraction of a second.

I see it.

Log it.

There are boundaries.

Which means—

they can be broken.

"Deal, brother," I say.

A smile.

Just a little too wide.

"Goodbye."

As if we're equals.

As if I'm not tethered to a black hole.

As if I have a choice.

The Angel says nothing.

But now—

he's watching.

Closer.

Which means—

I've become a variable.

We move on.

Another chamber.

The ship is already waiting.

Of course.

Nothing here happens by accident.

I step inside.

Sit.

The system adjusts to me faster than I adjust to it.

Launch.

No acceleration.

No motion.

Just—

I'm already in transit.

I lean back.

Look ahead.

But think—

of something else.

Ironheart.

Liara.

The platoon.

They're there.

Alive.

But not free.

Mine.

…or not anymore?

I clench my fingers.

Control returns.

A little stronger.

A little sharper.

"You know," I say quietly into the empty cabin, "if this ends well, I'm going to start charging for saving galaxies. Apocalypse, now with a guarantee."

Silence.

I close my eyes.

For a second.

Inside—

numbers.

Resources.

Risks.

Windows.

The Angel gave me a goal.

A threat.

Tools.

And thinks he controls me.

Mistake.

A big one.

I open my eyes.

And for the first time—

I smile for real.

Cold.

Clear.

Deliberate.

"Alright," I say quietly. "We build the fleet. We strike. We distract."

A pause.

Short.

But inside—

the decision is already made.

"And then we see who integrates whom."

The ship glides through the void.

And somewhere out there—

another galaxy.

Xeno-Synapse.

A collective of free minds.

What I used to be.

And suddenly—

a thought.

Quiet.

What if…

I go still.

It doesn't fully form.

But I feel it.

What if they could help me…

Even quieter—

…bring Liara back free?

My eyes snap open.

Stop.

That's a dangerous thought.

I check myself.

Fast.

Hard.

Silence.

And in that silence—

I'm afraid

that this realization itself

is part of the Dark Mind's plan.

And that—

is worse than any threat.

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