Elliot POV
The ship looked like sothing that should have died years ago and had simply failed to do so out of stubbornness.
That was my first thought when I climbed the ramp behind Teren and felt the tal groan faintly under our weight. It was long and low and patched in uneven plates, with old burn marks near the rear thrusters and the kind of cargo-bay sll that ca from too many lives having passed through it without anyone ever pretending it was ant for comfort. Fuel. Dust. Machine oil. Damp wiring. Old cloth. Burnt coolant. The air inside held all of it together with the patience of neglect.
I had expected sothing cleaner.
Not elegant. I was past expecting elegance from this road. But so part of had still imagined that escape, if it ca, would carry a shape worthy of decision. Sothing swift. Sothing sharp. Sothing fit for consequence.
Instead we had been given a freight runner ugly enough not to be rembered.
Teren called that an advantage.
He was probably right.
Varis crossed the threshold ahead of without hesitation. He did not look around like a freed prisoner testing the edges of a new world. He moved through the cargo hold with the dry economy of a man who had long since learned that every environnt becos temporary if one survives long enough. Age had not made him slow in the ways that mattered. It had only stripped waste from him.
Teren sealed the ramp behind us and keyed the inner lock.
The sound of it engaging settled sothing in and unsettled sothing else.
There are doors that protect.
There are doors that imprison.
And then there are doors that tell you the life behind them is no longer available.
This one was the third kind.
For a mont none of us spoke.
The cargo hold was lit by two failing overhead strips and the softer red pulse of standby indicators running along the walls. Netting hung from one side where transport crates would usually be secured. A narrow passage led forward to the cockpit and side berth. Another, smaller compartnt had been fitted with fold-down bunks and a wall cabinet whose latch had been repaired badly enough that it rattled whenever the ship's internal systems cycled.
Teren moved first, because he always did when stillness threatened to beco reflective.
"We lift in four minutes," he said. "No one touches anything they don't understand."
"That leaves you alone with the whole ship," I said.
"It leaves the ship alive."
I might once have answered differently. Sothing sharper. Sothing childish enough to hide itself as wit. But fatigue had thinned the easier responses from , and besides, Teren had earned the right to be unpleasant about competence.
Varis lowered himself into one of the side seats near the bulkhead and folded his hands over the dark cloth at his knees. He looked, for the first ti since the prison, less like a ghost returned to motion and more like an old man who had simply chosen the next room with care. That made him no less dangerous. Only harder to categorize.
I stood where I was a mont longer, listening to the ship wake around us.
A system clicked sowhere below the deck.
Power redistributed.
The rear thrusters gave a low, throat-like hum.
Sothing in the port-side hull expanded with heat and knocked once against the inner brace.
It was the sound of movent preparing itself.
Teren disappeared into the cockpit, and I heard him cursing softly at a control panel old enough to resent being touched. I looked toward Varis then. He had already closed his eyes, not sleeping, only listening.
"You seem very comfortable for a dead man," I said.
One eye opened.
"I have had more practice than you."
That answer would once have irritated more than it did now.
I leaned against one of the cargo braces and looked toward the sealed ramp behind us. Beyond it was the city. Beyond that the prison. Beyond that the council chambers and archive halls and all the white-lit structures in which I had been taught that truth could be reached if one followed law and discipline far enough inward.
I did not know if I believed that in the sa way anymore.
The thought ca without drama.
That was what made it harder to dismiss.
Teren's voice called from the cockpit. "If you want answers, now is the wrong ti. If you want to keep breathing, co sit down."
I moved forward through the narrow passage and stepped into the cockpit.
It was tighter than I expected. Two front seats, one auxiliary fold-down station, cracked displays, old route glass, and a control board worn smooth in places by hands long dead or long indifferent. The viewport gave a partial view of the lower port district outside: wet pavent under failing lamps, freight lines, cranes, service workers in reflective coats, the skeleton shadows of loading gantries, and above all that the layered rise of the city itself, still dark at the upper bands, dawn not yet fully touching it.
Teren sat at the pilot controls with one wrist on the console and his other hand moving through startup sequence with the calm of a man who had always trusted systems more than people.
"You know how to fly this?" I asked.
"I know how not to die in it."
"That sounds less comforting than you think."
"It wasn't ant to comfort you."
Varis entered the cockpit behind but did not sit in the rear station. He stood for a mont looking through the forward glass at the city as if asuring not its scale but its failure.
"We have a departure slot?" I asked.
Teren snorted softly.
"We have sothing better. We have neglect."
He keyed one last line, and the old runner vibrated fully awake beneath us.
I settled into the auxiliary seat, strapped in, and finally asked the question that had been building in since the prison but had beco unavoidable in the silence afterward.
"Why did no one stop us?"
Teren did not look at .
"Because no one saw."
"That's not true."
"No," he said. "It isn't."
I waited.
That, too, had beco new in . Not patience exactly. A slower kind of hunger. The recognition that so answers reveal themselves only after you stop trying to force them into the first shape that would make you feel clean.
Teren adjusted thrust balance and let the runner drift an inch from the mag clamps before locking it again.
"Lower people don't know," he said. "The prison chain believes Varis died. The registrars believe the route closed properly. The d wing believes they processed another old body. That much is real."
"And higher?"
He glanced at then.
"Hearing sothing is not the sa as understanding it."
"That still isn't an answer."
"It's the only one I'm giving while we're still under city authority."
Varis spoke then, voice level and dry.
"The old order has not chosen to help us, boy. It has chosen not to close its hand."
Teren said nothing to that, which told enough to deepen the wound and not enough to heal it.
"So they know," I said.
"So of them know enough," Teren replied. "Enough to leave a road open. Enough to watch what you do with it."
The words sat between us like sothing with its own body.
"Why?" I asked.
That question, more than any before it, made the ship feel small.
Teren's fingers rested lightly on the console. He looked back out at the port, where a fuel crawler rolled through mist and low light with the sad authority of routine.
"Because the truth is no longer small enough to bury in archives," he said. "Because so n would rather risk what's beyond the wall than keep pretending the wall is still holding."
"And you?" I said.
He turned his head just enough for to see the outline of his expression.
"I'd rather know what I'm helping destroy."
That was not comfort either.
The launch panel went green.
Teren lifted us smoothly, almost gently, and the berth fell away beneath the runner's nose as we rose through the lower freight lane into the city's pre-dawn air.
I had expected noise. Shudder. Force.
Instead the departure felt almost indecently quiet.
The port drew back. Wet concrete gave way to layered rooftops, transit lines, service towers, then wider lanes and the first glass surfaces of the mid-city sectors. Rain still clung to the structures below in broken sheets of reflected light. Sowhere to the east dawn was beginning, pale and thin and too weak to change the deeper color of the world yet.
I watched the city open beneath us and understood, all at once, how much of my life had assud this center ant sothing lasting.
The chambers.
The archives.
The council lights.
The doctrine of order.
The confidence that if a truth mattered enough, the old structures would eventually learn to carry it properly.
Maybe that had once been true.
Or maybe boys are only taught to think so because every institution requires at least one generation willing to confuse inheritance with permanence.
Varis had taken the seat behind us at so point during the lift, but I had not heard him do it. I turned slightly and found him watching not the city but .
"What?" I asked.
"You are mourning," he said.
"No."
"Yes."
"It's a city."
"It is the shape your certainty wore."
I looked back through the viewport before I answered.
The prison district was no longer visible from that height. It had vanished into the geotry of the whole, absorbed by the sa urban body that had quietly allowed us to leave. Sowhere beneath us, records now showed Varis dead. Sowhere behind lit stone and sealed chamber doors, soone above n like Teren had chosen not to stop us and was now waiting to see whether silence would produce understanding or disaster.
Perhaps both.
"If I'm mourning anything," I said, "it's the ease of not knowing."
Varis inclined his head faintly.
"Better."
The ship cleared the denser bands of air traffic and moved into the upper departure lanes where the city's true shape could finally be seen.
It spread like a layered wound.
White towers and old stone.
Transit veins glowing faintly blue.
Senate spires, freight basins, habitation blocks, shrine terraces, industrial lungs of smoke and heat.
All of it ordered.
All of it strained.
All of it still pretending there was one center from which aning flowed cleanly outward.
I had loved places like that once.
Not for their beauty alone. For what they promised.
Now I looked at that promise and could no longer tell where it ended and denial began.
"We follow the south arc until clearance edge," Teren said, more to the ship than to either of us. "Then we take the lower fold corridor and disappear into licensed freight traffic before anyone rembers to care."
"That sounds hopeful," I said.
"It's mathematics," he replied.
Varis made a low sound behind us that might once have been laughter if he had believed enough in pleasure to spend the full shape of it.
I let the city drift in silence a little longer, then asked the question that had been turning in since the sanctuary and had only grown heavier through the prison, through the walk, through the ship.
"Why the Outer Rim?"
Teren did not answer. That was not his question.
Varis did.
"Because the city only gave you shadows."
I turned toward him.
"The Rim will give answers?"
"No," he said. "It will give you bodies."
That was the sort of sentence that might once have struck as cryptic performance. By then it only felt like the edge of a thing too large to be spoken plainly.
He continued before I could ask.
"In the city you saw fragnts. Faith beneath structure. Silence inside order. n hiding truth because they feared what truth would do to their institutions. Useful things. Necessary things. But still fragnts."
His eyes remained on , old and dark and impossible to read cleanly.
"If you want to know the Red King, you cannot know him from prisons, sermons, and sealed rooms alone. You must see what was made in his na. What was broken in his na. What was fed, reordered, buried, worshipped, liberated, and rewritten by his passage."
Teren kept his attention on the departure route, but I saw the muscles in one side of his jaw tighten slightly. He was listening.
Varis went on.
"The city showed you what the old order fears. The Rim will show you what he beca."
Sothing in recoiled from the certainty of that.
Sothing else leaned toward it despite myself.
"That sounds as if you want convinced," I said.
"No," Varis said. "I want you unable to remain simple."
That answer stayed with longer than I wanted it to.
We cleared the last city marker and entered the upper black where the atmosphere thinned and the noise of the planet fell away, replaced by the steady interior life of the ship and the muted brightness of distant traffic beacons. Below us, the city had beco sothing almost beautiful—too far now for sll, hunger, secrecy, or decay to argue visibly with its architecture. A false peace of distance.
I thought then of the sanctuary.
Of bread.
Of children.
Of the poor kneeling not in madness but gratitude.
I thought of the prison death-record bearing Varis's na.
Of the gold code on the slate.
Of the way doors had opened too easily.
Of Teren's quiet skill and quieter fear.
Of the old man behind who had waited for sothing I still did not understand enough to na.
Then I looked down one last ti at the city and felt the shape of the truth settle without comfort:
I was not leaving it in victory.
I was leaving it because whatever I needed to understand would never fit inside the borders of order again.
"Outer corridor in thirty seconds," Teren said. "If either of you wants to pray, do it silently."
"I thought n like you didn't believe in prayer," I said.
"I believe in not distracting pilots."
The stars ahead had begun to sharpen already, as if anticipating the violence that would soon be done to distance. Route markers blinked across the forward glass. The old runner adjusted itself with a low tremor, nose aligning toward a darkness that was not empty at all but crowded with routes, histories, wars, and things n nad frontier because admitting ignorance felt too humiliating.
Varis said nothing now.
Neither did I.
There are monts when language only weakens the crossing.
Teren pushed the ship harder.
The city dropped away fully behind us.
The world beneath beca sphere and glow.
The stars before us widened.
Then the jump systems caught.
Light bent.
Distance surrendered.
The stars broke into long white lines.
And as the ship entered hyperspace toward the Outer Rim, I understood that whatever truth waited ahead had been calling long before I knew enough to hear its na.
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