The room swayed in slow-motion kaleidoscope hues of pink and cerulean. A faint hum of synthetic wind drifted through the air, carrying with it the static of a distant star collapsing. She stood in the middle of the chaos, her sharp, almond-shaped eyes narrowing as she adjusted the strap of her pink cat-ear-shaped headphones. The faint glow of her neon accessories caught the light like shards of crystal in the dim canopy of the dying Polaron system. Her white tank top glimmered faintly with traces of dust, material that seemed like it had been plundered from the surface of a comet.
Her name was Liora—a scavenger, a smuggler, a dreamer of lost galaxies. Behind her, the wreckage of a derelict starcruiser towered into the endless skies of Eonex 7. The planet’s twin suns cast an eerie glow against the metallic carcass, and the silhouetted remains of old, forgotten technology dotted the cracked surface of the world. Liora’s white thigh-high stockings were stained with the reddish sand that blew endlessly across the horizon like a phantom ocean. Her expression was composed but fierce, her vivid pink hair whipping gently in the artificial wind of her suit’s exo-filters. She tightened the choker around her neck—a gift from someone she couldn’t quite remember anymore but whose absence gnawed at her worse than the vacuum of space.
She adjusted the small holo-communication display on her wrist cuff. The blue holographic face that popped into existence blinked twice before frowning. A voice, soft but exasperated, broke through the static. “Liora, you’re really out there alone? Again? You know Chloe would kill you if she knew.”
Liora smirked, her feline headphones glowing faintly in sync with the transmission. “Relax, Jace. You worry too much. Chloe doesn’t run my life—you know that.” Despite her casual tone, her voice carried a subtle undercurrent of exhaustion, even sadness.
Jace rubbed the back of his neck in the transmission. He was a wiry guy with dark skin, narrow eyes, and an engineer’s toolkit always slung at his hip. His environment behind him was starkly different from hers—a vibrant, bustling space station with merchants, mercenaries, and the occasional rogue AI unit scanning crates of stolen goods. “This isn’t a game anymore, Liora,” he said. “The Aurelig Consortium has hunters everywhere—they’re mopping up anyone who even breathes near one of their systems.”
Liora bit her lip, her fingers lingering over the small drone hovering near her shoulder. The little cylindrical bot whirred protectively, its sensors anxiously scanning the surroundings. “The Consortium… they’re after a bigger prize, Jace. Something hidden out here at the edge of the system. I’m not leaving until I find it.” She pulled a small shard from her pocket—a jagged piece of obsidian-like material that pulsed faintly, almost alive.
“Liora…” Jace hesitated. “That thing you’re holding… you know it could be more dangerous than anything you’ve ever handled before, right? I mean, stardust tech—real stardust tech—could destabilize an entire galaxy if it falls into the wrong hands.”
“That’s why it’s in the right ones,” she shot back. “Nobody else can stop them if I don’t.”
She disconnected the call before Jace could argue further, her hand trembling for a moment before she thrust the relic back into her pocket. The air around her grew heavy suddenly, the kind of oppressive silence that precedes something catastrophic. That’s when she heard it: a low, guttural hum, like the groan of tectonic plates shifting deep beneath the planet’s surface.
Her sapphire drone chirped sharply. “Incoming hostiles. Three signatures. Initiating combat protocols.”
Cursing under her breath, Liora leaped onto a nearby pile of warped metallic debris. Her lithe frame moved like liquid, feline and precise. From her left wrist, a small beam weapon snapped into place, emitting a crackling pink energy field. The first hunter emerged from the thick haze: a hulking android enforcer clad in black poly-armor, its crimson visor scanning for a target. Two smaller drones flanked it, their orbs thrumming with lethal intent.
Liora cracked her neck and gave a razor-edged grin. “Fancy seeing you here, boys. Let’s dance.”
The android lunged forward, and Liora sidestepped, her weapon cutting a long arc of blazing pink energy into its chassis. Sparks flew as the android retaliated, sending a concussive blast her way. She was nimble, ducking and weaving with an almost feline grace. Her drone darted above her, launching disruptor pulses at the smaller units as they swarmed.
Amid the chaos, the sky seemed to ripple. A deep, resonant pulse shook the ground, and Liora stumbled. Everyone—machine and human alike—froze for a split second as the horizon cracked open like stained glass shattered by a cosmic hammer. A luminous figure stepped through: a woman draped in flowing silver, her translucent form flickering like a hologram on the edge of breaking.
“Who among you holds the relic of the Starborn?” the figure demanded, her voice impossibly loud yet achingly serene. The androids shifted their gaze toward Liora, who clutched the pocket holding the shard tightly.
Liora’s voice came out hoarse but defiant. “I do.”
And just like that, the world seemed to tilt, the twin suns dimming as Liora felt herself being pulled toward the figure, the relic in her pocket glowing brighter than ever before. The battlefield dissolved into shards of memory, fragments from a past she had long buried. A love lost. A betrayal that cut deeper than any blade. A promise to someone she could never forget.
“Then you are marked,” the figure whispered, her glowing hand reaching forward.
Liora inhaled sharply as the weight of stars settled onto her shoulders. This was only the beginning.
Genre: Sci-fi/Adventure
The Source…check out the article that inspired this amazing short story: Pink Catgirl Cosplay: Channeling Playful Elegance with Stunning, Pastel-Inspired Fashion
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