Space fiction
published

Singular Offering

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On the brittle frontier of Eiren’s Hold, salvage captain Sera Kade confronts a failing settlement and an ancient lattice that can fold habitable space—if anchored by a single mind. As corporate forces close, Sera faces an impossible choice amid urgent containment and political pressure.

sacrifice
identity
frontier politics
ancient tech
bioethics

Salvage

Chapter 1Page 1 of 24

Story Content

Sera Kade had been gone from Eiren’s Hold long enough to forget how the sky over the settlement could look like a wound. When her courier skiff vector-hooked into the upper tether one of the stabilizers shuddered and a spindrift of dust fell past the viewport like the last ash from a fire gone cold. Below, the cluster of domes and terraces held their ordinary clutter—water reclamators, stacked hydrobeds, the low, patient hum of generators—but the hum had thinned. People moved with a look she recognized from childhood: waiting for the other shoe, counting things that could not be counted. It was the same look that had followed her after the field error years ago. It tightened in her chest with every docking clamp.

Ebo Halen met her at the transit loft with a hand around a steaming cup and a face that had learned to translate fear into logistics. He did not offer pleasantries. His voice went straight to the problem. “Tethers two and four are requiring manual burns. Hydro yield is down ten percent and the orbital collectors are drifting. We’ve got rationing scheduled next cycle if you can’t bring anything in.”

Sera said nothing at first. The smell of the hot cup reminded her of the workshop bay where she used to sleep, of the times she stayed too long with a failing drive core until the night crew called her a ghost and left. “Show me the manifests,” she said finally. Her voice was rough from too many late returns.

They walked through corridors that hummed with the attempt at normalcy. Notices scrawled in hurried handwriting clung to walls: repair crews needed, volunteer shifts, a list of names for supply allocations. People passed with eyes that registered who she was—a salvage captain who had once salvaged more than metal—and then moved on. That motion was survival; it was also a kind of social gravity. Sera felt its pull the way a ship feels a planet’s mass.

In the planning room Dr. Ilen Voss had already set a map of the outer lanes on the table. She was small and precise, the kind of scientist who kept a mental index of what could be trusted and what needed close watching. When she looked up and saw Sera, the scientist’s smile thinned into something like worry.

“We pinged an old facility,” Ilen said. “Derelict orbital array. The coordinates are outside mapped traffic channels but within salvage range. If there’s undegraded tech there, it could buy us time. We’re not talking about a new star, just systems that can rebalance the collectors, maybe a replicator feed.”

Sera saw the way Ebo watched her then, the silent calculus in his posture: salvage captain, can interface with ancient rigs, can be trusted where bureaucracy could not. Guilt, that old companion, tightened. She had a long ledger of mistakes. The one that mattered most opened under the skin when she thought nobody could see. A field miscalculation on a terraforming job had killed several crew and left a scar across her left forearm to prove it. People still remembered. She remembered their faces and the small bright things they had loved—an orange mug, a child’s knitted cap frayed at the seam—and her memory made her a different kind of risk.

“Show me the manifest,” she said again. “Tell me who’s coming.”

They made a plan that fit the margin they had. There would be a pilot—Jun Var, who could thread a skiff like a needle—and Lian Sook, a systems engineer with a knack for archaic protocols. Dr. Voss would accompany them to catalog whatever they found. Sera suppressed the reflex to take on too many roles; she knew the seduction of being the one who fixed every loose bolt. She would lead, but she would not carry everything herself.

When they launched under an inkless sky—an emptiness without the faint compensations of orbit traffic—the cargo hold smelled of recycled air and the specific tang of hope. Sera did not look back.

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