Lina hadn’t been complaining. She’d been calculating . Quietly. Obsessively. The way she did everything. But Kim had heard anyway—because Kim listened to the hum of the ship the way priests listen for scripture.
Lina looked.
Kim had stumbled into the engine bay smelling of ozone and burnt cinnamon. Her suit was half-unsealed, her grin crooked, her eyes the color of a collapsing star’s final flash. She held out a fistful of crystallized dark matter.
“Always,” Lina replied. She pressed her palm flat against the console, grounding herself.
Lina had wanted to say: I’d remember you without the light.
The fleet called her reckless. Dangerous. Uncontainable .
Logline: In a fleet of stardust harvesters bound by gravity and protocol, one rogue navigator—Kim, the Tail-Blazer—rewrites the laws of drift. And the quiet engineer watching from the aft-deck can do nothing but ache. The aft-viewport had fogged again. Lina wiped it with her sleeve, smearing the condensation into swirls that mirrored the spiral arm of the galaxy outside. But she wasn't looking at the stars.
The tail blazed first—a sudden, silent bloom of sapphire and white. Then the ship followed, small as a forgotten prayer, banking so hard that its ventral fins scraped the upper atmosphere of a gas giant Lina hadn’t even noticed was there. Kim wasn’t flying away from danger. She was dancing with it. Courting it. Daring the void to blink.
A pause. Then Kim’s voice, softer now. Almost tender.
Lina called her home .
“Tail-Blazer,” she whispered. “Come home when you’re done breaking physics.”
To watch for the light that loves her back.
She didn’t. She just tightened a bolt and nodded.
She was looking for the tail .
“Good. I’m coming about for a pass. Look up.”