The golden tapestry Anya had woven began to smoke. Where the void-ship’s shadow touched her radiant limbs, the light didn’t just dim—it curdled, turning into a grey, ash-like substance that drifted away into the vacuum. The ecstasy that had served as her nervous system for the last hour shattered, replaced by a cold, clinical detachment that wasn't her own.
The boy’s voice, previously so silken and assured, cracked. It wasn't a whisper of encouragement anymore; it was a frantic, staticky whine, like a radio signal losing its frequency. "The gardener," the voice hissed, no longer sounding like a boy at all, but like the grinding of tectonic plates. "The gardener has returned to prune the harvest."
Anya tried to pull back, to retract the tendrils she had sunk into the freighter crews, but she found the connection had fused. She was no longer just the predator; she was the anchor. The void-ship didn't fire weapons. It didn't need to. It simply existed with such profound gravity that reality began to lean toward it. The *Wanderer* groaned, its ancient, calcified bones snapping as the dark vessel drew closer. The shimmer of the trade lane—her "celestial garden"—was being sucked into the maw of the black ship, not as food, but as debris being cleared from a path.
As the word **"Awaken"** vibrated through her teeth, Anya’s vision bifurcated. With one set of eyes, she saw the golden goddess she had become, surrounded by her worshipful, dying flock. With the other, she saw the truth of the bridge: she was a charred, hollowed-out husk of a woman, suspended in the air by jagged shards of glass and wire, her "light" nothing more than a bio-luminescent parasite leaking from her ruptured organs.
The void-ship opened. There was no airlock, no mechanical hiss—only a fold in the darkness. A figure stepped out onto the shimmering, oily film that now coated the *Wanderer’s* deck. It was tall, clad in armor that seemed to be made of frozen starlight, and it carried a long, curved blade that hummed with the frequency of a dead sun.
The figure didn't look at the dying crews or the molten gold ships. It looked directly at the screaming, golden thing that inhabited Anya’s skin. It raised the blade, and for the first time since the transformation began, Anya felt a sensation that the Starseed couldn't transmute into rapture. It was the cold, sharpenable edge of true consequence.
"The cycle is premature," the figure spoke, its voice a landslide of glass. "You have feasted on the seed before it could take root."
The blade descended, not toward Anya’s heart, but toward the golden umbilical cord connecting her to the *Wanderer*. As the steel met the light, the scream that tore from Anya’s throat wasn't her own—it was the sound of a thousand stars being extinguished at once, and for a terrifying second, she realized she wasn't being saved or consumed; she was being harvested by something that viewed her entire existence as a weed, and the very fabric of her being began to unravel like poorly spun thread.