Reply To: The Last Cruise of Helix 25

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#7765
Jib
Participant

    Zoya clicked her tongue, folding her arms as Evie and her flickering detective vanished into the dead man’s private world. She listened to the sounds of investigation. The sound of others touching what should have been hers first. She exhaled through her nose, slow and measured.

    The body was elsewhere, dried and ruined. That didn’t matter. What mattered was here—hairs, nail clippings, that contained traces, strands, fragments of DNA waiting to be read like old parchments.

    She stepped forward, the soft layers of her robes shifting.

    “You can’t keep me out forever, young man.”

    Riven didn’t move. Arms crossed, jaw locked, standing there like a sentry at some sacred threshold. Victor Holt’s grandson, through and through, she thought.

    “I can keep you out long enough.”

    Zoya clicked her tongue. Not quite amusement, not quite irritation.

    “I should have suspected such obstinacy. You take after him, after all.”

    Riven’s shoulders tensed.

    Good. Let him feel it.

    His voice was tight. “If you’re referring to my grandfather, you should choose your words carefully.”

    Zoya smiled, slow and knowing. “I always choose my words carefully.”

    Riven’s glare could have cut through metal.

    Zoya tilted her head, studying him as she would an artifact pulled from the wreckage of an old world. So much of Victor Holt was in him—the posture, the unyielding spine, the desperate need to be right.

    But Victor Holt had been wrong.

    And that was why he was sleeping in a frozen cell of his own making.

    She took another step forward, lowering her voice just enough that the curious would not hear what she said.

    “He never understood the ship’s true mission. He clung to his authority, his rigid hierarchies, his outdated beliefs. He would have let us rot in luxury while the real work of survival slipped away. And when he refused to see reason—” she exhaled, her gaze never leaving his, “he stepped aside.”

    Riven’s jaw locked. “He was forced aside.”

    Zoya only smiled. “A matter of perspective.”

    She let that hang. Let him sit with it.

    She could see the war in his eyes—the desperate urge to refute her, to throw his grandfather’s legacy in her face, to remind her that Victor Holt was still here, still waiting in cryo, still a looming shadow over the ship. But Victor Holt’s silence was the greatest proof of his failure.

    Riven clenched his jaw.

    Anuí’s voice, smooth and patient, cut through the tension.

    “She is not wrong.”

    Zoya frowned. She had expected them to speak eventually. They always did.

    They stood just a little apart, hand tucked in their robes, their expression unreadable.

    “In its current state, the body is useless,” Anuí said lightly, as if stating something obvious, “but that does not mean it has left no trace.” Then they murmured “Nāvdaṭi hrás’ka… aṣṭīr pālachá.”

    Zoya glanced at them, her eyes narrowing. In an old tongue forgotten by all, it meant The bones remember… the blood does not lie. She did not trust the Lexicans’ sudden interest in genetics.

    They did not see history in bloodlines, did not place value in the remnants of DNA. They preferred their records rewritten, reclaimed, restructured to suit a new truth, not an old one.

    Yet here they were, aligning themselves with her. And that was what gave her pause.

    “Your people have never cared for the past as it was,” she murmured. “Only for what it could become.”

    Anuí’s lips curved, withholding more than they gave. “Truth takes many forms.”

    Zoya scoffed. They were here for their own reasons. That much was certain. She could use that

    Riven’s fingers tightened at his sides. “I have my orders.”

    Zoya lifted a brow. “And whose orders are those?”

    The hesitation was slight. “It’s not up to me.”

    Zoya stilled. The words were quiet, bitter, revealing.

    Not up to him.

    So, someone had ensured she wouldn’t step foot in that room. Not just delayed—denied.

    She exhaled, long and slow. “I see.” She paused. “I will find out who gave that order.”

    And when she did, they would regret it.