The Crownward March had a na now, but a na didn’t slow enemies down.
That beca clear the very next day.
Aurelian hadn’t even finished going through his first set of reports when Astra called his attention to sothing that couldn’t be ignored.
She stood across from him in the command room at Larkspur Haven, calm as always, while a series of sensor records hovered between them.
Each one looked slightly different on the surface, but the pattern behind them was the sa.
Small Kharov ships.
Not fleets.
Not yet.
These were probes, scouts, and light investigation hulls, the kind sent ahead when sothing felt off but no one wanted to commit real force just yet.
They were moving closer to the outer edges of the region, slipping through routes that had gone quiet, testing areas that should have still been under Kharov’s control, and trying to understand why things weren’t responding the way they used to.
"They’re trying to get information about us," Astra said.
Aurelian looked over the tracks again, slower this ti.
Three of them were already gone.
One had been removed by local forces after it crossed too far into a controlled route. The other two had been taken out by Astra herself when they didn’t turn away fast enough after being detected.
Individually, none of them was a real threat.
But that wasn’t the point.
They weren’t aningless either.
This was how it always started.
First ca uncertainty, when sothing didn’t feel right, but no one had enough information to act properly.
Then ca a scattered investigation, small pieces sent out to gather more data. And once enough of those pieces ca back, or failed to co back, the next step followed.
Real fleets.
"They know sothing is wrong," Aurelian said.
"Yes," Astra replied.
"They just don’t know what yet."
Astra gave a small nod, agreeing with that.
That matched his own understanding.
The Kharov had already lost too much here for it to stay hidden forever. Larkspur Haven had changed hands, even if they didn’t know who held it yet.
Frontier fleets had disappeared without explanation. An archaeological detachnt had been completely wiped out.
Entire groups of controlled populations had been removed from their reach without warning.
Each of those things on its own could have been explained away.
Bad luck.
Local failure.
Sothing temporary.
But taken together, they were starting to look like sothing else.
A pattern.
And once the Kharov saw it clearly, they wouldn’t hesitate.
That ant the Crownward March didn’t have unlimited ti.
Aurelian turned away from the sensor data and looked toward the larger strategic display.
Larkspur Haven, Helion Bastion Twelve, the Mournveil route, and the distant ruin field were all marked, each one layered with its own level of importance.
He already knew the general answer.
He wasn’t going to sit here and wait for the Kharov to decide where the fight would happen.
Not when he still had the chance to act first.
The question wasn’t whether to attack.
That part was already decided.
The real question was where.
And just as important, in what order.
The ruin field ten light-years out still mattered. The four damaged cruisers there were too valuable to ignore, and the engineering ship upgrade tied to that site could change his position in a major way.
At the sa ti, there was a strong argunt for striking the Kharov before they had ti to organize properly in response to what had already happened.
If he chose the right target, he could gain resources, combat experience, and disrupt their response all at once.
If he chose the wrong one, he would waste ti and show his hand too early.
That was enough reason to call another eting.
This one was smaller.
More focused.
There was no need to gather everyone again.
He only needed the people who could help him think through the next move.
So when it began, the room held Astra, Lysara, Solenne, Rhoswen, Astercourt, Caelan, and Vaeren in person.
Seris and ren joined through a projection from deeper within Helion Bastion Twelve.
Elowen had been inford but not called in, since her work wouldn’t change whether he targeted the Kharov world first.
Neris wasn’t there either, because logistics would co after the decision, not before it.
Aurelian didn’t take ti to ease into the discussion.
"The Kharov are probing harder," he said. "That ans we’re close to the point where they stop testing quietly and start moving openly. I don’t intend to give them that advantage."
Caelan folded his arms as he studied the displayed scout tracks.
"They’re already suspicious," he said. "If this were just local leftovers, maybe we’d still have ti. But it’s not. These are early feelers before sothing bigger."
"That’s my read as well," Aurelian said.
Vaeren gave a short nod. "The Kharov don’t tolerate uncertainty on their borders. Once reports start failing or no longer make sense, they respond with force. Sotis more force than necessary."
Rhoswen’s interest sharpened slightly at that.
"More force sounds useful," she said. "Stronger targets."
Astercourt didn’t even look up from her slate. "Only if we survive them."
Rhoswen let out a quiet snort but didn’t argue.
Aurelian shifted the display, bringing up the wider map of the region.
"Before we fully commit to a larger conflict," he said, "there’s still the ruin field ten light-years out. The four cruiser recoveries there still matter. That hasn’t changed."
Lysara’s attention imdiately moved to the marked location.
"It shouldn’t," she said. "If even two of those hulls can be recovered and awakened properly, they will make a difference."
"Yes," Aurelian said. "But the issue is timing."
That brought everyone to the real problem.
If he focused fully on recovering those ships first, he risked giving the Kharov more ti to organize their response.
Weeks, maybe months, to gather strength and prepare properly. But if he struck the Kharov first, he would be doing it with a fleet that was still small in number, even if it was strong for its size.
There was no perfect answer.
Only one was better than the other.
Astra spoke first, cutting through the situation cleanly.
"The rear can be held," she said. "Not comfortably, but it can be held. If you strike first and keep their attention inside their own space, then pressure on Haven stays delayed."
Aurelian nodded once.
That matched what he had already been thinking.
He didn’t need to take large sections of Kharov territory right now. He needed to keep them occupied, keep them reacting, and keep their focus turned inward long enough for the Crownward March to beco stable.
If their main forces stayed busy inside their own regions, then the frontier near Haven would remain unclear to them for longer.
Caelan picked up on that right away.
"So you’re thinking of hitting deeper," he said.
"Yes."
"Not just border targets."
"No."
That made the room quieter.
It was one thing to talk about fighting the Kharov in general.
It was sothing else entirely to talk about striking deep enough that the damage forced their entire structure to look inward instead of outward.
Aurelian turned his attention to Solenne.
"You were operating farther out than anyone else recently," he said. "What do you see?"
Solenne didn’t hesitate. She brought up a set of route overlays from her last mission, along with additional information gathered from the people Vaeren had helped extract.
The data spread across the display, showing paths, weak points, and possible targets, forming the beginning of sothing more than just a plan.
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