Blaring alarms; the metallic taste of blood and stomach acid.
What—
A voice thunders in her skull.
Navigator Lanis! Collect yourself!
Lanis. Navigator. The words seem to refract through her shimmering mind, but they have their effect. She gasps, opening her eyes into red-rimmed darkness. Other sensations flood into her: pain— a splitting headache. Coolness, all around her. She’s in a navigation pod, ensconced in oxygenated gel, a deep part of her realizes.
Navigator Lanis!
She closes her eyes tightly and another world lights up, the bionics in her mind running a full systems check and selective reboots. A stream of data flashes through her mind’s eye, absorbed by her subconscious and… something else. Another thing, burrowed alongside her mind.
A name. Demeter.
Where are we? What just happened? she asks, thickly stumbling over the words. Except they aren’t words, but thoughts, conveyed as quickly as they arise to the ship’s AI.
Lanis. Navigator Lanis. That’s me, she realizes.
SYSTEM REBOOT COMPLETE
Her eyes snap wide open for the second time against the cool gel: she’s Lanis Osgell, Acting Navigator Third Class, on her first Warp Jump. And something has gone truly, horribly, breathtakingly wrong.
We’ve been pulled off course, Navigator. Unclear etiology. Jump, stat. Jump, stat. Course: Terra. Powering jump, awaiting Navigator guidance.
The massive voice that echoes in her skull is that of the Demeter, the ten megaton Jupiter-class ship’s AI. The Demeter is technically a supply ship, but every ship in the Fleet armada is still armed for battle and more advanced than anything Lanis has set foot on until a week ago. I’m fresh out of Academy training, not even a full Navigator yet; why is the Demeter having me run the jump?
Where is Navigator Sanislav? she asks, knowing the answer as fast as the inquiry is made.
Massive intracranial hemorrhage detected. Resuscitation efforts ongoing.
Lanis tries to push down the newest flood of fear as she absorbs this information. What about her own headache? She trusts that the Fleet implants will do their job and keep her ICP within just allowable limits. Except they didn’t, not for Sanislav.
What happened? Where are we?
There’s a heartbeat pause.
Not alone, the Demeter says, the bulk of its massive attention suddenly shifting elsewhere, weapons systems scrambling online.
Lanis’ entire body twitches within her pod. She feels… it, not just with the Demeter’s sensors but viscerally, like a long finger brushing along her neck.
“What the fuck?!” she screams. This time she physically expels the words, thick air bubbles slipping past her breathing tube and into the gelatinous ochre of the navigation pod.
The tale has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the violation.
Focus, Demeter commands, haltingly. Get us back to Terra. Forming warp bubble. Awaiting guidance!
Lanis eyes roll and widen, but she also gets to work, nearly a decade of Fleet training and implants overriding her bulging terror. She doesn’t understand what’s happening, but she feels the Demeter fighting for its life against whatever it is out there, in a space where nothing else should be. Lanis instinctively makes herself smaller, allowing only a trickle of data into her mind feed. It’s like doing a quantum physics assignment in the dark while hiding from a monster— flicking a penlight on and off to see the assignment, then to scribble a note, all while trying to keep herself sane in the extra-dimensional reality of Warp Space. She feels her mouth silently forming the words of a navigation invocation, unconsciously choosing the Gayatri Mantra.
Still, a part of her mind registers an ongoing conversation with the Demeter, the chatter of battle-speak and ship data flowing around her, her mind like a pebble caught in a flooding river.
Captain Harris woken on emergency protocol. Specialist teams 5, 6, and 7 woken on emergency protocol. Weapons online. Countermeasures online. Weapons team AI integration complete. Countermeasure AI integration complete. Captain Harris at 70% function and rising.
The scale of the emergency is further driven home: only Fleet Navigators should be awake during a Warp Jump, as even Captain Harris will go insane after only a few minutes of consciousness in a space where his mind knows it shouldn’t exist. The Demeter must be truly desperate for his guidance.
Somewhere too though is the dawning realization that Lanis is actually figuring it out, on her first jump. She’s still technically just a cadet, here just to observe Navigator Sanislav on a routine resupply run to Barrack Prime. Am I even allowed to do this? a minute part of her whispers, and is immediately informed that all the unalienable protocols have already been overridden. God, oh god.
Androvan ship detected. Weapon flares. Bracing, the ship states.
Lanis’ pupils dilate again, her meditative trance teetering. How are they here? Where did they come from?
She doesn’t get a reply from Demeter, merely a pressure in her mind that forces her back to her task, but not before she brushes against the impossibly rapid battle-chatter of Captain Harris and the weapons’ teams. She glimpses the energy spikes, and even within her navigation pod she feels a shudder as something hits the ship. A damage report appears for a microsecond, but it’s shoved aside as the weight of the Demeter’s attention shifts back to her.
Focus! Computation check complete. Warp bubble holding. Focus, Navigator. Ship to crew— emergency jump in 3, 2, 1.
Lanis’ psyche abruptly becomes fully one with the ship. She can feel oxygen and biological matter spilling out from the gaping tear in the Demeter’s hull, bulkheads grinding down to staunch the bleeding. Across from the Demeter is a needle-like Androvan ship, shockingly close, though distance is a futile concept within the dimension they occupy. The Androvan ship is their enemy, but also, she realizes, a victim itself.
It’s being… consumed. That’s the only way she can describe it. She watches with the Demeter's sensors, nightmarishly better than any biological eyes, as the silver arches of the Androvan's command bridges buckle one after another, its mass-drivers and point defense lancers no longer directed at the Demeter, but at something else, something incomprehensible that has already killed the ship past hope.
It’s coming. Jump. Now.
Lanis wonders briefly if she's ready. Realizes it doesn't matter if the ship is torn apart in the jump—any longer here and they're all dead anyway. So she gathers the ship in the palm of her mind, an act that the Demeter, no matter how huge and advanced, cannot comprehend, and plunges it through a dimensional fold of her own imagination, back to Terra. She's heedless of the redlining energy consumption, or the bulging warp bubble, or the hemorrhagic warnings and blood in her mouth as she focuses her psyche, magnified by the Demeter’s tech savants, beyond any capacity she thought possible. It's like a child's nightmare come-to-life on an unfathomable scale, her mind pushing the Demeter through the clinging mud of Warp space while a terror reaches out its claws toward her, so close that she can feel its obscene breath hot against her back.
Back, back, back! Oh god, oh god, oh god.
She remembers screaming, her body convulsing as they re-enter real space: screaming and thrashing and bleeding from her nose, and her ears and her eyes, the blood blooming patterns into the navigation pod’s fluid. Beyond the screams though, deep in her mind, she still recognizes the Demeter's quiet words.
Well done, Navigator.
Then the ship tries to sedate her.

