"Get away from me, you worthless stalker."
Blythe Sterling's voice shattered the soft melody of the grand ballroom; it was a venomous, low growl. His icy hands pressed hard on Hadley Haines' cheap dress, pushing her shoulders with all his brute force. She stumbled back like a puppet whose strings had been cut, her frail, gaunt body unable to steady herself, violently slipping onto the marble floor.
For a woman, to suffer such public humiliation in the interstellar world is simply unimaginable. After all, in the Interstellar Alliance, the male population is hundreds of times greater than that of women. Every pure-blood woman is born with a unique spiritual ability, a powerful force that can suppress the inherently savage nature of men. These rare and precious top-tier women hold a status even higher than that of the aristocracy in the Interstellar Empire. The law allows them to enter into contracts with multiple elite men, forming a bonded partner group protected by the entire alliance. It can be said that women are the rare treasures of the entire interstellar society, existing that everyone strives to please, respect, and adore.
But Haddley was different; she was the most prominent oddity in the entire Galactic Federation-born a complete Psi-Null with no trace of Psi energy. Medical institutions and noble circles regarded her as a genetic defect, making her worthless in this male-dominated Galactic Federation. While other women moved freely in public with armed bodyguards, adored by crowds, Haddley endured endless scorn, ridicule, and unwarranted humiliation wherever she went, even being trampled on her dignity by ordinary low-ranking commoners.
The soft symphony in the ballroom suddenly stuttered and vanished completely. The polite conversation of the New York elite gradually turned into hollow echoes, hundreds of eyes fixed tightly on her curled figure on the ground, flickering with mockery and unmistakable disdain, their gazes crushing her last shred of self-respect.
The sharp, mocking laughter first erupted from the socialites around Blair. "Look at this useless null," one woman sneered. "She can't even stand up for herself, yet she dares to enter into a betrothal contract with Lord Blair."
"Any lady with a Psi talent would be gently cherished by Blair, only this genetic trash deserves to be publicly pushed away and humiliated," a second sharp voice chimed in, and the crowd erupted in a wave of laughter, burning away the last bit of pride Hardey had left.
Before she could fully endure the humiliation, a more cruel pain exploded in Hadley's mind. Blinding pain surged from behind her eyes, accompanied by fragmented, unfamiliar memories-interstellar ships, gene classification technology, the Psi energy ranking system that classified citizens into strict hierarchies, and the cold, ruthless regulations of the Federation of Planets. Hadley's original soul, a timid, infatuated girl who blindly clung to her fiancé Blair, had already died. In its place, the soul of a cold, ruthless interstellar survivor awoke, a soul that had endured countless life-and-death struggles in the desolate universe.
Hadley's eyes fluttered open. The fear and pleading compliance in them vanished without a trace. In their place was the cool, predatory sharpness of a lone wolf. Her blurry vision gradually sharpened, locking onto the polished tip of Blair's luxury leather shoes.
She instantly assessed the current situation. This body belonged to a worthless, despised Psi-Null woman. Her nominal fiancé, Blair Sterling, an S-class elite heir, was merely temporarily bound to her for emotional stability, borrowing the reputation of a female partner to calm his irritable rage. He planned to discard this powerless void woman once he grew bored and choose to publicly humiliate her at this crowded banquet, completely dissolving the engagement, turning instead to pursue a truly valuable high-level Psi woman.
"Get up from the floor this instant. Stop playing the pitiful victim to gain sympathy. A worthless Psi-defective like you is never worthy of my attention."Blair looked down haughtily at her crumpled form on the marble floor, his face twisted with undisguised contempt. He nudged the frayed hem of her dress with the tip of his shoe, his tone sharp and arrogant.
The old Hadley would have wept, begged, and clung to him desperately. But the reborn Hadley felt nothing but icy indifference. Bracing herself on the cold marble, she stood slowly yet firmly. Though her frame remained frail, her aura turned sharp and unyielding. She lifted her gaze to meet his condescending stare, her voice calm yet piercing.
"Is that so? Bullying the weak and humiliating others in public-Lord Sterling, that is the true definition of worthless."
Before Blair could recover from his shock at her defiance, she moved in a split second. Leveraging the momentum of standing up, she drove her heel hard into his unguarded ankle in a fierce retaliatory strike.
Immersed in his own superiority and triumphant arrogance, Blair was completely caught off guard. His ankle buckled under the sharp impact, and his legs gave way instantly. He let out a sharp yelp, flailing his arms wildly. The half glass of martini in his hand flew into the air and shattered on the marble floor beside him. The prestigious S-class heir fell flat on his face in an utterly wretched, ridiculous posture.
A collective gasp swept through the stunned crowd, plunging the grand ballroom into dead silence.
Blair was furious, his fists clenched obviously wanting to do something more.
Hadley straightened her posture and brushed the dust lightly off her dress with unhurried composure. She lifted her wrist and tapped the smooth silver Federal intelligent terminal on her bracelet. A holographic screen flashed to life. "Federation Bonded Partner Protection Act, Article 3, Clause 2," she recited in a clear, frigid voice, drawing on the newly awakened legal knowledge in her mind. "The Interstellar Federation legally grants women the right to form contractual bonds with multiple male partners. If a bonded partner inflicts physical harm or reputational damage on a woman in public, Federal Guard drones are authorized to intervene immediately."
She tilted her head and glanced up at the arched ceiling, her tone laced with quiet warning. "I have detected three Federal law enforcement drones on standby in this ballroom. Blair, would you like to test how fast they respond to an official distress signal?"
The crowd fell into stunned, whispered murmurs. The poised, law-citing woman standing before them was unrecognizable from the timid, stammering girl who had always bowed submissively to Blair.
Hadley bent down slightly, lowering her voice to a mocking chuckle only Blair could hear. "You are nothing but a spoiled, temperamental brat who only dares to vent his rage on the vulnerable. I once wasted my infatuation on a worthless fool like you."
The last traces of sorrow and obsession from her original soul vanished entirely. There was no pain in her heart, only calm, rational judgment. The original Hadley had been entangled in betrothals with three arrogant elite heirs, all of whom had exploited her nominal female status to secure stable contractual privileges and noble prestige. Now, she would sever all these useless ties completely.
She also recalled a crucial legal clause: any woman who can prove her fiancé has publicly humiliated and defamed her has the right to unilaterally terminate their betrothal contract. Every guest present serves as a valid witness. Furthermore, the trust fund left by Hadley's parents had been illegally frozen by these elite noble families. She would reclaim all her rightful assets to survive and thrive in this interstellar world.
Hadley lifted her foot from Blair Sterling's shoulder and stepped back to a safe distance, then reactivated her terminal scanner to target the disgraced kneeling man.
"Official records are binding and final," she declared with undeniable authority. "I, Hadley Haines, hereby formally initiate judicial proceedings to unilaterally nullify all legal validity of my betrothal contract with Blair Sterling, on the grounds of public assault and malicious defamation."
Ignoring the furious Blair and the astonished crowd, she turned her back on her miserable past. She walked toward the quiet VIP lounge, ready to completely terminate the useless contract and embrace her brand-new life.
The heavy oak door of the VIP lounge swung open with a bang, slamming against the interior wall.
"What the hell do you think you're doing?" Blair's voice was a raw shriek of fury.
Hadley didn't look up. She was comfortably seated on a plush leather sofa, her terminal resting on the polished mahogany coffee table in front of her. She was scrolling through the dense legal text of the Federation's marital contracts.
"I'm busy," she said, her tone flat and dismissive. "Close the door. You're letting the noise in."
Blair stormed into the room, his two co-fiancés, Faye and Brodie, trailing behind him like nervous shadows. His face was still flushed a deep, ugly red.
"Don't play games with me, Hadley," he snarled, planting his hands on the table and leaning into her space. "This is just another one of your pathetic attempts to get my attention, isn't it? A little drama to make me feel sorry for you?"
He clearly believed she was bluffing. That this was all some desperate, last-ditch effort to win him back.
He straightened up, a cruel smirk returning to his face. He pulled a folded document from his inner jacket pocket and tossed it onto the table. It slid to a stop next to her terminal.
"Sign this," he ordered. "It's a waiver. You sign away all claims to your trust fund, and you get on your knees and apologize for embarrassing me. If you do that, I might... be persuaded to extend some measure of protection. As a Sterling always protects his assets."
Hadley finally lifted her eyes from the screen. She looked at the document. Then she looked at him. Then she picked up the cup of lukewarm coffee sitting on the table.
And threw its contents directly onto the front of his pristine, white Armani suit.
Blair screamed, a high-pitched, childish sound, as the brown liquid soaked into the expensive fabric. He jumped back, frantically dabbing at the stain with a napkin.
In that moment of distraction, Hadley's finger tapped the final confirmation button on her terminal's screen.
SUBMIT UNILATERAL DISSOLUTION REQUEST: CONFIRMED.
A soft chime echoed in the quiet room.
Instantly, the large holographic screen on the lounge wall, which had been displaying a serene image of a nebula, flickered to life. The golden crest of the Federal Supreme Court blazed into view.
A cold, synthesized AI voice filled the space.
"Engagement contract H-77B3, between Hadley Haynes and Blair Sterling, has been terminated under the Public Defamation clause. All associated asset freezes are hereby lifted. This ruling is final."
Blair froze mid-dab. Faye and Brodie stared at the screen, their faces masks of disbelief. They had always treated Hadley like a doormat, an accessory they were legally obligated to tolerate. They never imagined she had the spine to actually sever ties with their three powerful families.
Hadley's gaze shifted to them, cold and unwavering. "That was the first contract," she said, her voice flat. "The system processes linked dissolutions. Yours are next."
Before they could react, her terminal chimed twice more. Two new holographic notifications materialized above her wrist.
"Engagement contract H-77C4, between Hadley Haynes and Faye Sterling, has been terminated under the Associated Public Defamation clause."
"Engagement contract H-77D5, between Hadley Haynes and Brodie Velez, has been terminated under the Associated Public Defamation clause."
Faye's mouth opened and closed soundlessly. Brodie took an instinctive step back, as if the words on the screen were a physical blow. In an instant, their legal hold on her inheritance, their claims to her trust fund, went up in smoke.
The lounge door opened again, this time more quietly.
Rhiannon Prescott, Hadley's cousin, glided in. She was the picture of high-society elegance, from her perfectly coiffed blonde hair to the red soles of her designer heels. She surveyed the scene-Blair's stained suit, Hadley's calm demeanor-with an air of supreme authority.
"Hadley, you are making a spectacle of yourself," Rhiannon said, her voice dripping with condescension. "You are embarrassing the Prescott name."
Hadley ignored her completely. Her attention was fixed on her terminal, where a long string of numbers was rapidly populating her previously empty account. The satisfying chime of incoming credit transfers was music to her ears.
"Did you hear me?" Rhiannon's voice sharpened. She was used to being the center of attention. Being ignored, especially by Hadley, was an insult she couldn't tolerate. "This little tantrum of yours will ruin our family's reputation. I demand you withdraw this ridiculous application at once."
When Hadley still didn't respond, Rhiannon's carefully constructed composure snapped. She lunged forward, her manicured fingers reaching for the terminal on the table.
"Give me that!"
Hadley's reaction was instantaneous. Her hand shot out, not to protect the terminal, but to intercept Rhiannon's wrist. Her grip was like a steel trap. She twisted.
Rhiannon cried out in pain, a sharp, surprised yelp.
"Don't touch my things," Hadley said, her voice dangerously low.
With her other hand, she reached for the glittering diamond necklace around Rhiannon's throat. It was a family heirloom, a piece that had belonged to the original Hadley's mother. Rhiannon had "borrowed" it years ago and never returned it.
Hadley's fingers closed around the cold stones. With a sharp tug, the clasp broke. She ripped the necklace free.
At that exact moment, her terminal let out a piercing, high-pitched siren. The screen flashed a brilliant, alarming red.
The AI voice spoke again, louder this time, its tone urgent.
"WARNING. Unbonded Psi-Null Female detected. Genetic profile has been re-entered into the Federal Mandatory Matching database. Searching for compatible partners... Match found. Assigning new binding contracts. Quantity: Five."
The room fell into a dead silence.
Even Rhiannon forgot the throbbing pain in her wrist.
Five?
One-time assignment of five partners? That was unheard of. A statistical impossibility. The system was designed to assign one, maybe two partners at most, and only after a lengthy compatibility review.
Blair was the first to break the silence. He burst into laughter, a harsh, mocking sound.
"Five? The system must be broken!" he crowed. "They're probably assigning you five pieces of trash from the lowest city sectors. Five homeless beggars to go with the Psi-Null beggar!"
Faye and Brodie, however, didn't look so amused. They exchanged a worried glance. The Federal matching system was based on genetic potential. An anomaly of this magnitude... it meant something was deeply wrong. Or deeply significant.
Hadley's brow furrowed in annoyance. She had just gotten rid of three leeches, and now the system was forcing five more on her? She saw a "REJECT" button on the screen and jabbed at it.
A new message popped up: Under the Federal Propagation Act, mandatory assignments are non-negotiable.
Great. Just great.
On the wall screen, the files for her terminated contracts with Blair, Faye, and Brodie dissolved into digital ash. In their place, five new files appeared, materializing from the ether. Each one was sealed with a heavy, black stamp that read: CLASSIFIED.
Rhiannon, clutching her wrist, finally found her voice again. It was filled with venomous glee.
"I hope they're all genetic deviants," she spat. "I hope they're monsters on the verge of Psi-collapse. You deserve nothing less."
Hadley coolly slipped the diamond necklace into the pocket of her dress. "Even monsters are better than hypocrites," she said, her voice flat.
She stood up, her gaze sweeping over the stunned faces of her former fiancés and her cousin. They were leeches, all of them. Parasites who had fed on the original Hadley's hope and inheritance.
"From this day forward," she declared, her voice resonating with a finality that chilled them to the bone, "the weak, pathetic Hadley you knew is gone."
She turned and walked towards the door. They still saw her as a worthless Psi-Null, a joke. But the way she moved, the straightness of her spine, the sheer killing intent radiating from her, told a different story.
As her hand touched the doorknob, her terminal vibrated.
The lock on the first classified file clicked open.
And a single, blood-red, SSS-class insignia burned on the screen.
She pushed the door open and strode out into the corridor, leaving the stunned silence of the VIP lounge behind her.
"An SSS-class? Don't make me laugh. It's probably a clerical error."
Rhiannon's mocking voice followed Hadley out into the corridor. She had followed her, unable to resist getting in the last word.
Hadley ignored her, her focus entirely on the holographic screen of her terminal. The first file was open. A handsome, stern-faced man with silver hair and piercing gold eyes stared back at her.
Name: Kyler William.
Title: Grand Marshal of the Imperium Starforce.
Species: SSS-Class Wyvern Therian.
The title alone was enough to make most people in the galaxy stop breathing. A Grand Marshal was a living legend, a god of war.
Hadley had no idea who he was. The name meant nothing to her.
But it meant something to Rhiannon.
Her cousin, who had been sneering a second ago, let out a choked gasp. Her eyes widened in horrified disbelief as she stared at the screen.
"Kyler William?" she shrieked, her voice cracking. "The Dragon of the Void? That's impossible!"
A few other guests, drawn by the commotion, had drifted out of the ballroom and were now peering over Hadley's shoulder. The sight of the Grand Marshal's file caused a ripple of shocked murmurs.
"She got matched with a national hero?" someone whispered.
A heavy, stunned silence fell over the corridor. The air itself seemed to freeze. Then, Rhiannon's shock slowly curdled, and her lips twisted into a derisive smile. It grew into a laugh, louder this time, tinged with hysteria.
"Oh, you fools," she cackled, pointing a trembling finger at the screen. "Look closer! Yes, he was the Grand Marshal. But he was decommissioned years ago! His Psi-Energy collapsed! He's a broken, useless piece of trash!"
She was right. Beneath the glorious titles, a single line of text glowed a damning, clinical red.
Status: Terminal Psi-Energy Collapse.
The file provided more detail. His collapse index was at 80%. Medically, that was a death sentence. He was a ticking time bomb, a berserker who could lose control at any moment and turn into a mindless, bloodthirsty beast.
The mood in the corridor shifted instantly from jealous awe to horrified pity.
A man wearing a Federal Medical Corps armband shook his head grimly. "An 80% collapse... he won't last three months. Binding her to him is just... sending her to be his final meal."
The whispers grew louder. The system hadn't just made an error. It had gone insane. Pairing a Psi-Null, a female with zero energy to soothe a collapsing Therian, with the most powerful and unstable warrior in the Imperium's history? It was a death sentence.
Then, her terminal chimed again. And again. Four more times in rapid succession.
The other four classified files opened.
Fleet Commander Kent Tillman. SSS-Class. Terminal Collapse.
Intelligence Commander Brennon Hendrix. SSS-Class. Terminal Collapse.
Marine Corps General Hugh Hamilton. SSS-Class. Terminal Collapse.
Imperium Prince Darrel George. SP-Class. Terminal Collapse.
Five legends. Five of the most powerful warriors the galaxy had ever known. All SSS-class or the equivalent.
And all of them were dying.
A final piece of information loaded, common to all five files. A single, chilling set of coordinates for their current location.
Location: Umbra Sanitarium, Planet Tartarus-7.
A wave of outright laughter swept through the corridor. It was loud, unrestrained, and cruel.
The Umbra Sanitarium wasn't a hospital. It was a tomb. A high-security prison on a toxic, forgotten planet where the Imperium sent its failed assets to die. It was a place you whispered about in horror stories.
Rhiannon was clutching her stomach, tears of mirth streaming down her face.
"Oh, this is perfect!" she gasped between peals of laughter. "Not only are you shackled to five dying madmen, but you're being exiled to the galaxy's most notorious garbage dump! A Psi-Null with her five pieces of scrap metal. It's poetic!"
Hadley's face remained a mask of indifference. But her fingers, hidden at her side, curled slowly into a white-knuckled fist. She calmly closed the holographic files. She looked at Rhiannon, a cold, flat gaze sweeping over her cousin's triumphant expression. Her eyes lingered for a fraction of a second-a look that promised a reckoning-before she spoke.
"By the way, cousin," Hadley said, her voice as cold and flat as deep space. "Since my engagement contracts are terminated, the Prescott family's collateral claim on the downtown penthouse is now void. I believe the Federal Bank will be repossessing it. Tomorrow."
Rhiannon's laughter died in her throat. Her smile froze, then crumbled. Her own terminal buzzed violently. She glanced down at it, and the color drained from her face. An official eviction notice from the bank. Hadley was telling the truth.
Hadley's terminal chimed one last time. It was a notification. As the legal spouse of five high-ranking military officers, she had been granted residency rights. At the Umbra Sanitarium. It was a prison, but at least it came with room and board.
Then, another alert, this one far less welcome.
NOTICE: Your trust fund has been permanently seized under a debt dispute filed by the Sterling, Velez, and Prescott families. All assets are revoked. Additionally, the downtown penthouse property has been immediately repossessed by the Federal Bank. You have been flagged as a financial liability.
Of course they were. The rich don't give up their spoils easily. She was penniless and homeless in a single stroke.
Rhiannon saw the notice on Hadley's screen and her triumphant smirk returned, laced with venom. "Well, well. Looks like you won't even have money for the shuttle ticket. You'll be sleeping on the street tonight, trash."
A hotel security guard approached them, his expression stern. "Ma'am," he said, looking directly at Hadley, his eyes flicking to her cheap dress. "This area is for VIP guests only. I'm going to have to ask you to leave."
Hadley didn't argue. She didn't say a word. She spotted a worn, canvas suitcase tucked away in a corner-the original Hadley's only luggage. She walked over, picked it up, and turned towards the grand exit.
Her back was straight. Her head was held high. In that moment, surrounded by enemies and stripped of everything, she looked more like a queen than anyone else in the room.
She knew fighting their lawyers now would be a waste of time and energy she didn't have. Tartarus-7. A prison planet far from the reach of these powerful families. It wasn't a punishment. It was a sanctuary. The perfect place to hide, to heal, to grow strong again.
She pushed open the heavy glass doors of the hotel.
A blast of cold, wet air hit her. New York was crying, a miserable, chilling downpour.
Hadley stepped out into the night, the rain plastering her thin dress to her skin. She didn't shiver. She just lifted her gaze, her sharp eyes scanning the neon-lit sky, looking for the signs that pointed the way to the spaceport.
Her new journey had begun.