The first impact did not co from the front.
It ca from the side.
Deep-space monitors lit up as one of the massive hostile formations veered away from the fractured lattice sector and accelerated along a curved path that avoided the strongest defensive nodes.
"They’re not charging straight in," Elira said. "They’re flanking."
On the main projection, the armada separated into five colossal energy bodies. Each one pulsed with layered currents, darker and denser than anything they had faced before. Smaller shards orbited around them like escort drones.
"They studied our containnt tactic," Mara muttered.
Sarya stood in the center of the resonance chamber, the filant in her chest humming steadily. Fatigue still lingered in her limbs, yet the network’s pressure kept her upright.
"They won’t send fragnts again," she said. "Each of those cores is self-sustaining."
Sereth’s projection sharpened. "The outer lattice is attempting to reinforce Earth’s sector, but distance limits response ti. You must endure the first exchange."
Hollen exhaled slowly. "Define endure."
The answer ca seconds later.
The first hostile core launched a compressed beam toward a junction where two damaged lattice threads connected to Earth’s defensive ring.
It did not hit the planet.
It hit the connection.
The impact shattered one of the weakened threads completely.
On the projection, a bright line snapped.
The filant inside Sarya reacted like a pulled nerve. She staggered but held her footing.
Daniel rushed forward. "You good?"
"I’m still here," she replied.
The planetary halo flickered unevenly.
"That thread was feeding reinforcent from three outer sectors," Elira said. "We just lost external support from that quadrant."
Kael leaned over a console. "If they sever two more, we’re isolated."
"They’re trying to cut us off before they strike directly," Mara said.
The second core moved into position.
This one did not fire a beam.
It expanded.
Its surface rippled, then released a cloud of smaller energy bodies that spread outward like a net.
"They’re mining the lattice," Sereth warned. "If those attach to connection points—"
A burst of static cut him off.
On-screen, the smaller hostile units latched onto multiple lattice lines and began draining current.
The defensive halo dimd slightly across one hemisphere.
Sarya felt the drain imdiately.
"They’re siphoning," she said. "Not breaking. Draining."
Daniel stepped into the resonance circle beside her.
"Then we reverse the flow."
Mara joined without hesitation.
The braid ford again, though it felt heavier this ti as if gravity pressed inward from every direction.
Instead of pushing energy upward blindly, Sarya traced the filant outward and locked onto the draining points.
She redirected the current sharply.
On the projection, the lattice lines feeding the siphoning units began glowing brighter.
The smaller hostile bodies flickered as the energy surge overwheld their intake capacity.
One detonated.
Then three more burst in sequence.
The cloud thinned rapidly.
The larger core responded instantly.
It compressed its outer layer and fired a focused pulse straight through the lattice.
The pulse did not strike a node.
It traveled along a thread directly toward Earth’s halo.
"They’re using the lattice as a weapon," Elira shouted.
The pulse raced forward faster than any previous attack.
Sarya did not have ti to reposition nodes.
She did sothing else.
She widened the filant.
Instead of keeping the braid narrow and precise, she allowed it to expand outward into the entire defensive ring.
The halo thickened, becoming less a barrier and more a cushion.
The incoming pulse hit.
The impact shook the resonance chamber so violently that dust fell from the ceiling.
The halo absorbed the strike unevenly, pushing energy outward across the atmosphere in bright ripples that looked like auroras igniting across multiple continents.
Civilian feeds showed the sky glowing green and blue in midday light.
Power grids flickered worldwide.
But the shield held.
Daniel’s breath ca hard. "That one hurt."
"They’re probing stress points," Mara said.
"And they haven’t committed fully," Sarya added.
The third core began moving.
Unlike the others, this one rotated slowly while generating a spiraling field around itself.
Sereth’s voice returned through interference.
"That formation indicates coordinated strike behavior. They are aligning trajectories."
"All of them?" Hollen asked.
"Yes."
On the projection, the five massive hostile cores ford a wide arc around Earth’s sector.
Each one began building energy simultaneously.
"They’re synchronizing," Elira whispered.
"If they fire together, we don’t just lose threads," Kael said. "We lose the halo."
Sarya felt it too.
The filant vibrated violently as if warning her.
She scanned the lattice map quickly.
"We can’t block five converging beams evenly," she said. "We’ll spread too thin."
"Then we don’t block evenly," Daniel replied.
Mara looked at him. "What are you thinking?"
He pointed to the fractured outer threads still glowing faintly beyond the battlefield.
"They want to isolate us. What if we pull what’s left of the outer lattice inward?"
Sereth reacted imdiately. "That maneuver risks collapsing adjacent sectors."
"But if we don’t," Daniel pressed, "we’re finished."
Sarya made the decision.
"We anchor everything to Earth."
Hollen hesitated only half a second before nodding. "Do it."
Sarya expanded the braid wider than she ever had before.
Instead of drawing energy only from the defensive halo, she reached through the filant into the outer network itself.
She called.
Across distant sectors, faint nodes responded.
Damaged threads began retracting toward Earth’s position like lines being reeled in.
The planetary halo thickened again as borrowed lattice segnts locked into its periter.
The sky above Earth glowed brighter than it ever had.
On global feeds, people stepped into streets, staring upward in stunned silence as layered rings of light ford like celestial armor.
The hostile cores fired.
Five beams of concentrated energy streaked inward from different angles.
The reinforced halo absorbed the first two.
The third struck the newly anchored outer segnts, causing massive flares that lit the atmosphere.
The fourth beam pierced partially through the outer ring before dispersing.
The fifth beam collided directly with the central band.
The impact drove Sarya to one knee.
Daniel and Mara held the braid steady, their arms shaking.
The chamber floor cracked further.
One of the overhead support beams snapped loose and crashed against a wall.
Elira scread over comms. "Energy levels are spiking beyond safe thresholds!"
The halo trembled.
For a mont, it looked as if the entire structure would shatter.
Then the borrowed outer lattice segnts locked fully into place.
The fifth beam dispersed.
The hostile cores dimd slightly after releasing that enormous strike.
"They overcommitted," Mara said through clenched teeth.
Sarya seized the opening.
She redirected the combined lattice into a forward surge.
Instead of waiting for another volley, the planetary halo fired outward in a unified counterblast.
The beam shot across space and struck the nearest hostile core directly.
Its surface fractured visibly.
Cracks of light spread across its dark mass.
The second core attempted to shield it, but the surge punched through both.
One core exploded in a silent bloom of light.
Fragnts scattered into deep space.
Cheers erupted across the chamber.
But the celebration died quickly.
The remaining three cores did not retreat.
They changed formation.
Instead of staying separate, they moved closer together.
Their energy fields began overlapping.
Sereth’s voice trembled faintly.
"They are rging."
On the projection, the three remaining hostile cores fused into a single colossal mass.
Its size dwarfed anything previously recorded.
The rged entity pulsed once.
The lattice around it bent inward slightly from sheer gravitational pressure.
Daniel stared at the screen. "That’s not an armada anymore."
"No," Mara said softly. "That’s a siege engine."
The rged mass did not fire imdiately.
It began advancing slowly toward Earth’s position.
Each pulse from it distorted nearby lattice threads.
As it approached, the filant inside Sarya burned hotter.
"It’s not just attacking," she said. "It’s compressing space along the network."
"If it reaches close range," Kael said, "the halo won’t matter."
The rged entity released a low-frequency wave.
It did not look dramatic.
There was no bright beam.
But every node across the planetary halo flickered violently.
The resonance chamber lights died completely.
Only the braid’s glow illuminated the room.
Sarya gasped as the filant felt as though it were being squeezed from both ends.
Daniel grabbed her shoulder. "Stay with it."
Mara reinforced her strand desperately.
The rged hostile mass continued forward.
Another wave rolled out.
This ti, the planetary halo dimd noticeably.
Cities below flickered into partial blackout.
Sarya understood the pattern suddenly.
"It’s not trying to break us," she said through strained breath. "It’s trying to suffocate the network."
By compressing lattice flow around Earth’s sector, it was starving the halo of usable energy.
"We need expansion," Daniel said.
"There’s no room," Mara replied. "It’s bending space inward."
Sarya’s eyes locked onto the filant.
"If it compresses space..."
She inhaled deeply.
"Then we expand through it."
Before anyone could question her, she did sothing none of them had attempted before.
Instead of reinforcing the halo outward, she forced the filant to project directly through the rged hostile mass.
The braid shot forward like a spear.
It pierced the distorted space surrounding the enemy.
For a mont, everything froze.
Then the filant locked onto sothing inside the rged entity.
A core.
Not energy.
Structure.
Sarya felt it.
A central node binding the fusion together.
She poured everything into that connection.
Daniel and Mara followed without hesitation.
The planetary halo brightened once more.
The filant tunneled deeper into the rged mass.
The enemy reacted violently.
It attempted to sever the connection, sending violent pulses along the braid.
Pain shot through Sarya’s spine, but she refused to release it.
"Hold," she whispered.
The rged entity began destabilizing internally.
Its surface rippled erratically.
But instead of collapsing, it began pulling the filant inward.
Sarya felt her consciousness dragged forward.
Daniel shouted her na.
The chamber shook as the enemy dragged the connection deeper.
And then—
The projection flared white.
Every monitor went dark.
The filant vanished from view.
Daniel and Mara were thrown backward as the braid snapped.
Sarya disappeared from the resonance circle.
The halo above Earth flickered wildly.
And the rged hostile mass surged forward unchecked.
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