The air in Sector 7 tasted of copper and slow death.
Evelyn Harper felt the shift before the monitors did. It was a phantom pressure in her lungs that ten years of medical training hadn't taught her, instinct had. She stepped into the residential bay, the scent of sweet decay brushing the back of her throat.
Across the room, her father was losing the fight.
Thomas Harper sat hunched in a bolted chair, his thin hands trembling as he clawed at the seal of his respirator. The oxygen monitor on his wrist flickered a frantic, angry blue.
"The air's thinner today, Evie," he rasped.
Evelyn was at his side in a heartbeat, her fingers moving with mechanical precision. She adjusted the intake and tightened the seal, her face a mask of calm she didn't feel. On the Orbit, you learned to move like the machines, or you broke.
"Maintenance backlog," she murmured, though they both knew better.
"Not backlog," Thomas whispered, gripping her forearm with surprising strength. "Neglect. Vane is letting the lower sectors suffocate while he fuels the launch bays."
Evelyn didn't answer. She knew Director Silas Vane had no intention of fixing their dying station. He was looking down at the Earth they had abandoned. The "Ashworld" was no longer a graveyard to the elite; it was a resource.
Unconsciously, her hand drifted to her shoulder. Beneath the crisp fabric of her officer's uniform, the silver crescent mark pulsed. It was a subtle, rhythmic heat-a heartbeat that wasn't hers.
Then, for the first time in years, it thumped. A heavy, resonant strike that vibrated through her bones.
The sensation dragged her back ten years, to the night the dream began.
Ten Years Earlier
It started with a sprint.
In the dream, Evelyn was on the surface, her bare feet slipping on earth that smelled of rain and scorched metal. She was being hunted.
Four shadows, eight feet of muscle and predatory grace, closed in. Their eyes were sulfurous pits of agonizing intelligence. She was cornered against a wall of ancient, weeping stone, her breath coming in ragged gasps as she cried out for a father who was miles above in the stars.
Then, he appeared.
He stepped from the darkness with a dangerous, relaxed elegance. He didn't look like a savior; he looked like a king in a child's skin. The monsters shifted, their snarls turning to whimpers before they melted into the trees.
"You... you scared them," Evelyn breathed, her heart hammering against her ribs. "My name is Evelyn."
"Ren," he replied. His voice was a low, subterranean vibration. He didn't turn to face her, his silhouette sharp against the orange moon.
Driven by a pull she couldn't explain, Evelyn stepped toward him. Her foot caught a root, and she stumbled. Before she could hit the ground, he was there. His movement was a blur, his hand catching her shoulder to steady her.
The moment his skin touched hers, the world exploded.
A searing, molten shock; like lightning braided with silk, tore through them both. It wasn't just heat; it was a recognition. An ancient, terrifying belonging. They both recoiled, gasping, but before she could speak, the dream shattered into white light.
"Evie."
Her father's voice pulled her back to the sterile grey of the bay. She blinked, realizing her hand was still pressed hard against the mark on her shoulder.
"You drifted again," Thomas murmured.
"Just tired," she lied, but the phantom heat of Ren's touch still lingered on her skin.
The door hissed open, and Leo stepped inside. Her oldest friend looked like a man who hadn't slept in a decade. As a systems architect, he was the only reason the resistance could still breathe, literally and figuratively.
He had saved her once before, during their Academy exams, when her mark had flared so bright it nearly alerted the Proctoring Drones. Leo had blown a coolant line to mask the glow, a debt Evelyn knew she could never truly repay.
"The transport's ready," Leo said, his eyes scanning for sensors before locking onto hers. "They're loading pulse-rifles. This isn't a scouting mission, Evie."
"Commander Jax?" she asked.
Leo nodded grimly. "And containment units. Vane wants his 'genetic keys.' He wants the wolves."
Evelyn felt a cold dread settle in her stomach. Vane didn't just want to return to Earth; he wanted to harvest the blood that allowed the survivors to endure the toxins he had helped create.
Leo stepped closer, his voice a bare whisper. "You don't have to go. We can hide you."
But Evelyn heard Vane's voice echoing in her memory: I own the air your father breathes.
"I have to," she said, her voice steady even as the second heartbeat in her chest began to race.
She wasn't just going down for the mission. She was going because the boy from the dream was calling, and after ten years of silence, the fire was waking up.