House Aurion slled like clean stone and controlled air.
Ned catalogued it as they walked down the Ladon's ramp: temperature gradients, trace compounds in the breeze, the faint floral overlay designed to reassure arriving patients that they had stepped into a place where nothing truly bad could happen to them.
He did not believe it.
A reception team waited at the bottom of the ramp: two dtechs with carts, a logistics officer with a slate, and a single security man in pale gray armor with a discreet sidearm and an even less discreet scanner rig hooked into his vambrace.
"Ladon," the logistics officer said, glancing from Kerran to Oga to Ned. "We have you on schedule. Two injured troopers, one civilian tech, one droid asset, two other survivors."
Her eyes lingered on Oga's sabers, then slid away. Heliox saw stranger things every day.
"Correct," Ned said through Kale's stolen voice. "Engaged by Imperial raiders in transit. Minor hull damage, so injuries. Civilians are d-support attached to convoy."
The security man's scanner pinged quietly.
He frowned.
"Signal noise off that unit," he said, nodding at Ned. "Lot of unsanctioned hardware in there."
Ned tilted his head.
"I survived Sanguis exposure," he said. "My modifications are non-standard."
"That'll do it," one of the dtechs muttered.
The security man didn't look convinced.
"Heliox requires full disclosure of augnt types before entering inner facilities," he said. "Especially coming from Sanguis. We're still cleaning up their trash."
He stepped closer, scanner raising.
Ned's internal warning flags ticked up.
"Lieutenant," the security man said to Kerran, "I need to run a deeper scan on your droid."
Kerran's eyes flickered.
"Yes, sergeant," he said automatically, Oga's mind-hold smoothing his voice.
The scanner ca up another fifteen centiters.
Ned weighed the trajectories. If he let the scan complete, the device would catch half a dozen illegal cores and unauthorized EM emissions. If he blocked it openly, alarms would follow.
"Apologies," Ned said.
He took one step forward.
The sergeant's attention flicked to him, recalibrating for threat.
That was all the window he needed.
A thin pulse snapped from a port in Ned's forearm, invisible and tightly collimated. It hit the scanner's housing, jumped to the sergeant's vambrace, and rode the cable into the neural interface woven beneath his skin.
The man stiffened.
His pupils blew wide.
Oga moved on the sa beat, hand flicking in a tiny, precise gesture. The Force pushed not like a shove, but like a surgeon's nudge, amplifying the disruption in the man's inner ear.
To everyone else, it looked like a sudden faint.
The scanner beeped once and went dark as its power relays fried harmlessly.
"Sergeant?" the logistics officer said, startled, as he swayed.
The dtechs lunged forward, catching him before he hit the ground.
"Neural fatigue," Ned said smoothly. "He stepped into the Sanguis field when he scanned my core. I should have warned you—my containnt bleed is lower than standard but not zero. Your interfaces are more sensitive than most."
The logistics officer blanched.
"You could've ntioned that on approach," she snapped.
"My apologies," Ned said. "I am not used to being scanned this closely outside of quarantine."
One of the dtechs ran a handheld over the sergeant.
"Vitals stable," she said. "Neural readings spiked and dropped. Looks like a micro-seizure. We should get him to a diagnostic bed, but he'll be fine."
The logistics officer pinched the bridge of her nose.
"Add 'Sanguis-contaminated droid' to the arrival log," she muttered. "House won't like it, but they approved the corridor. All right. Lieutenant Kerran?"
Kerran straightened.
"Yes, ma'am," he said.
"You'll accompany your patients in," she said. "We'll fast-track your troopers for scan and regen, then debrief you. Your droid… we'll log as special asset pending further screening."
Ned inclined his head.
"Understood," he said.
They wheeled the unconscious sergeant away.
Oga's eyes t Ned's for half a heartbeat.
He logged the victory in a small, cold corner: one suspicion neutralized without alarms.
Not the last.
—
The Ladon beca their decoy and their ho base at once.
Once the reception team and dical escort moved Oga and Renn toward the intake wing, Ned peeled off under the pretext of arranging "droid quarantine and integration." Two of the Seresh war droids stayed on the corvette, taking up the roles of silent technical crew.
In a maintenance niche off the docking umbilical, Ned found the access point he expected: a fat bundle of fiber and power conduits feeding the pad's control systems, locked behind a panel that required a Heliox badge to open.
Kerran's pilfered credentials solved that.
Ned popped the panel and peered inside.
"Order?" he sent.
> PRESENT, Order replied.
"Link into local pad control," Ned said. "No uplink beyond this node. We don't want to brush the core routers yet."
> UNDERSTOOD. PASSIVE TAP ONLY. FILTERING FOR: ALERT ROUTES, CARA FEEDS, SECURITY PING PATHS.
A slender connector snaked from Ned's wrist into the junction.
The world widened.
Not Heliox entire—just a sliver: pad caras, landing bay doors, adjacent corridors, the hum of routine traffic updates as ships arrived and left. He felt the flow of small warnings: a misparked cargo sled here, a temperature variance in a coolant line there.
All of it fed into Order's waiting processes.
> I CAN REDIRECT LEVEL-ONE ALERTS, Order said. > CARAS ON PADS AND NEARBY CORRIDORS CAN BE DELAYED OR LOOPED IN SHORT BURSTS. HIGHER SECURITY NODES ARE OUT OF REACH FROM HERE.
"Good," Ned said. "We will use subtlety until we cannot."
He resealed the panel and walked back toward the inner doors.
Oga and Renn waited just inside the threshold of the intake wing, Kerran hovering at their side with the dutiful tension of a soldier who had seen too much and didn't want to admit it.
"Ship?" Oga asked.
"Guarded," Ned said. "Our droids have local access. Order can nudge caras and low-level warnings. The core remains opaque."
Renn tugged at the collar of his borrowed jacket.
"So what now?" he said. "We just wander into the heart of a House capital and ask for a tour of their secrets?"
"No," Ned said. "We request a consult."
—
The first step was always the sa: find the person too valuable to question and too busy to suspect they were prey.
In House Aurion, that was a body architect.
They did not wear lab coats.
The woman Ned targeted wore a high-collared, midnight-blue coat with Aurion's sigil at the throat, a data-band at one wrist, and a look like she had been pulled from three different etings and hadn't liked any of them.
Her na, according to Kale's stolen cluster, was **Dr. Sela Dorn**. She specialized in pre-implantation architectures for the House's "Pri" line: bodies tailored for high-performance clients who wanted more than a new liver or a fresh face.
Ned had Order track her schedule through the intake wing's appointnt feeds.
"We are lucky," Order noted. "She is on-site today. Two consults in regen, one in structural correction, one slot open for 'liaison with Republic clients'."
"That last one is ours," Ned said.
He had Kerran make the call on internal comms, his voice guided by Oga's hold and Order's overlay of Kale's mannerisms.
"Dr. Dorn? This is Lieutenant Kale of the Ladon. Our d-support unit has Sanguis-adjacent data that might assist with immune-regen integration. House Aurion directed us to offer any findings."
Silence on the line for two seconds.
Then a sigh.
"Of course they did," Dorn said. "Send your unit and interpreter to consult room six. I have ten minutes before I'm due in a vat review."
"Understood, Doctor," Kerran said.
He cut the channel.
Renn blew out a breath.
"Ten minutes," he said. "Not exactly roomy."
"We have needed less," Ned said.
—
Consult room six was small, clean, and forgettable: a table, three chairs, a wall-mounted display, and a discreet secondary door that led toward internal lab space.
Ned rolled in a case that, to any scan, read as portable diagnostic gear. Inside: the compacted transfer rig, collapsed into segnts that would reassemble into an arch and pads in under thirty seconds.
Dorn arrived five minutes later, looking as if she were already regretting the ti.
She paused in the doorway when she saw Ned's chassis.
"That is not a standard d droid," she said.
"Correct," Ned said. "I am an M3-derived unit retrofitted for Sanguis containnt work."
She grimaced.
"You survived Sanguis?" she asked.
"Survived, yes," Ned said. "Enjoyed, no."
She gestured to the table.
"Sit, then," she said. "Talk. I have zero interest in war stories, but if you have data that keeps so idiot client from lting his own marrow, I'll listen."
Renn sat opposite her, slate in hand, playing the role of interpreter and data tech.
Ned stood.
"We do not need long," he said.
"Good," Dorn said. "Your ti starts now."
He did not move toward the chair.
Instead, he flipped the case latches.
The rig unfolded, quiet and precise, flower-petals of black tal and sensor arrays snapping into shape around the table.
Dorn froze.
"That," she said, "is not in any Republic d-spec I've seen."
"No," Ned said. "It is better."
She reached instinctively for her wrist-band, eyes narrowing.
Oga's hand, unseen at the crack of the door, made a small flick.
The band's internal contacts sparked, just enough to sting.
Dorn hissed and snatched her hand back.
"What is this?" she demanded.
"An opportunity," Ned said. "For you to help build sothing beyond your House's imagination, and to continue existing afterward in a way most of Heliox's victims do not."
She pushed her chair back, muscles tightening.
"You think you can threaten House Aurion in its own citadel?" she asked. "Security—"
"No," Ned said. "We will not threaten House Aurion. We will steal from it. That is different."
Order pulsed in the back of his awareness.
> WARNING: MINOR ALERT SPIKE NEAR CONSULT WING. LIKELY ROUTINE. NO DIRECT TIE TO ROOM SIX… YET.
Oga slipped fully into the room, closing the door behind her, sabers still hidden at her belt.
Dorn's gaze flicked from droid to woman to Renn, weighing odds she didn't understand.
"You won't get what you want," she said. "Heliox doesn't put its crown jewels in any one mind. We learned that from the last set of traitors."
"I know," Ned said. "I do not need the jewels. I need the map to the vault, and the way you think when you work the lock."
He gestured toward the rig.
"Sit," he said.
Dorn laughed once, short and humorless.
"Or what?" she said. "You'll kill ? House Aurion will rebuild and skin your surviving friends alive to pay for the materials."
Oga stepped closer, White State smoothing her presence into sothing cool and unyielding.
"You can walk out of this room with a headache and a promotion-worthy story about helping stabilize a Sanguis survivor," she said quietly. "Or you can test our patience. I don't recomnd the second option."
Dorn looked into Oga's eyes and saw nothing she could move.
She sat.
"Five minutes," she said. "And if I so much as feel you digging for things you shouldn't, I scream."
"You will not," Ned said. "You will be very busy thinking about work."
He lowered the arch.
—
The rig humd to life, its interior lights sliding through frequency bands Heliox's own machines never touched.
> MODE: CAPTURE – STRUCTURAL ARCHITECTURE CLUSTER
> TARGET: DORN, SELA – BODY ARCHITECT, HOUSE AURION PRI LINE
Ned fenced the cluster around a tight domain: embryology, template manipulation, vet-control paraters, and the peculiar thing Heliox called "Pri."
Data flowed.
He saw the base organism first, the one Dorn and her peers had spent their lives bending: a pale, translucent model in her mind's eye, whose geno was a lattice of switches and modular cassettes.
Heliox called it the **Pri Chassis**.
It was not human. It was not any known species. It was an engineered embryo line designed to be:
– Hyper-plastic in early developnt.
– Stable once set into a chosen morph.
– Chemically obedient to a specific matrix of growth factors.
Dorn thought of it in layers: base chassis → race-mimic profile → client-specific tweaks.
She walked him through, without aning to, how she grew a Twi'lek shell one day and a near-human the next, all from the sa chassis with different toggles flipped and different morphogen gradients applied.
It was brilliant.
It was insufficient.
Ned had hoped—against his better judgnt—for a universal body template that could absorb every stolen node with minimal refit. What Heliox had built instead was a **master species** that could wear other species' faces.
Copying, not truly reproducing.
Close, he thought. Closer than anything he had seen. But still a step short.
"Cluster at forty percent," the rig whispered. "Template manipulation patterns stable."
He pressed further, within the fence: template limits, failure cases, why so morphs broke and others took. Dorn's mory supplied scars: vats of twisted tissue, vitrified mistakes buried in House Aurion's polar partner's cryo-crypts.
Then he hit walls.
Where Dorn's thoughts touched the core of the system—the real control logic, the compiled designs that told vats exactly how to step a Pri embryo through ten thousand micro-state transitions—there was only darkness.
Heliox had learned.
"We don't see the source code," Dorn said once, in mory, to a colleague. "We get shaped config packets. Change too much, and House locks our access. It's safer for everyone that way."
"Cluster at sixty percent," the rig said. "No deeper vault access present in target mind."
Ned let out a breath he didn't technically need.
He had the concept. He did not have the blueprint.
It would be enough to start.
It would not be enough to finish.
"Shift focus," he told the rig. "Biochemical support layers. Growth accelerants. Vat stabilizers."
That was where he found the second revelation.
Blue.
In Dorn's working models, in her maintenance logs, in her automatic assumptions, it was always there: **Blue Miracle**, though House Aurion called it a dozen other nas in official files.
A tiny organism, bred in shadowed pools and sealed tanks: a formless, translucent blob that excreted a fluid the exact color of a clear Heliox sky at noon.
The fluid did three things:
– It accelerated cell division without triggering runaway cancers.
– It buffered against misfolded proteins during rapid growth.
– It communicated, in so deep, poorly-understood way, with the Pri Chassis' engineered receptors, smoothing developntal turbulence.
Without Blue Miracle, Heliox's vats would still work.
They would just take twenty years.
With it, they could turn an embryo into a viable infant in months. Sotis weeks.
"Cluster at eighty percent," the rig murmured. "Blue Miracle dependencies mapped at conceptual level. Detailed culture protocols redacted or externalized."
Ned watched Dorn's thoughts flinch away from a particular mory: a sealed wing, below and away from the main vats. Blue-lit halls. Tanks full of writhing translucence. Security symbols far above her clearance rating.
"They keep the breeding and the real control data for the Blue Miracle line in a separate facility," she had once told a junior. "We don't touch it. We just get the concentrate."
Ned cut the capture.
"Enough," he said.
The rig powered down.
Dorn sagged in her chair, eyes unfocused, face slick with sweat.
"You…" she muttered. "What did you… take…"
"Your House's arrogance," Ned said. "And its restraint."
He stepped back, letting Order encapsulate the new cluster in a quarantined partition.
> CONTENT SUMMARY:
> – PRI CHASSIS ARCHITECTURE MODEL (CONCEPTUAL, NOT SOURCE)
> – RACE-MIMIC TEMPLATING THODS
> – FAILURE MODES / LIMITS
> – BLUE MIRACLE FUNCTIONAL ROLE AND HIGH-LEVEL HANDLING
> CRITICAL GAPS:
> – CORE CONTROL-CODE STORAGE LOCATION: "VIT-CORE" (AIR-GAPPED VAULT)
> – BLUE MIRACLE BREEDING & DEEP PROTOCOLS: ISOLATED "BLUE WING" FACILITY
Oga watched Dorn carefully.
"Is she going to live?" she asked.
"Yes," Ned said. "She will have a bad day and so questions for herself about why she can't rember parts of this consult. But she will not die."
Dorn's hand twitched toward her data-band, then fell away again.
"We'll never… let you leave," she whispered. "You touch the Blue… and every House… every fleet…"
"Yes," Ned said simply.
Renn swallowed.
"So we have a half-map and a key component we can't synthesize alone," he said. "Great. Perfect. Fantastic."
"Incorrect," Ned said. "We know where to find the missing pieces. That is progress."
He turned to Renn fully.
"Blue Miracle lives in a specialized wing," he said. "A biolab and breeding facility with its own security bubble. The control-code for the vats' designs is in an air-gapped vault they call the vit-core. Both must be breached."
Renn's certainty wavered, then hardened.
"You want to take the droids and hit the Blue wing," he said. "Grab organisms, data, anything we can carry."
"Yes," Ned said. "Order will feed you route guidance from whatever low-level nodes we can tap. Expect bio-hazards and House Aurion's assumption that no one is insane enough to break into their miracle pens."
Oga raised an eyebrow.
"And us?" she asked.
Ned glanced toward the direction Dorn's mories had pointed: down, inward, toward the shining tower where the House's embryo vats rose like glass organs above the city.
"You and I," he said, "will go to the vit-core."
He let them feel the weight of it for a second: the idea of walking into the place where Heliox kept the closest thing it had to a god's workshop.
"We will not get a second chance," he said. "Once Blue Miracle is touched and the vit-core breached, the Houses will rearrange the Rim to find us."
Renn swallowed.
"So we get in," he said, "grab a handful of gods' notes and so divine algae, and run before the galaxy sets itself on fire."
"Approximately," Ned said.
Oga's eyes were very calm.
"And if we fail?" she asked.
"Then Asura remains an elegant idea," Ned said. "And House Seresh ends as a cautionary tale told in rooms like this."
He looked down at Dorn, at the faint crease between her brows as her mind stumbled around missing shapes.
"We have everything we are going to get from her," he said. "Oga, put her soplace safe. Renn, start morizing everything Order can scrape about internal routing. We split when the shift bells change. That will be our best window."
He turned toward the door.
Heliox's walls had not stopped them.
Now they were going for the teeth.
------------------------
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