Episode 12
The Birth of Luminark
When we arrived in Gearberg, we headed straight for Granâs workshop.
âGran! Weâre back!â
âOh. First, put your things in your room. After thatâstarting today, youâll call me Chief Engineer.â
âYes, Chief Engineer!â
We answered in unison, though inside, my chest was swirling with both excitement and nerves.
Our new room was simple and minimalânothing fancyâbut somehow, that made it feel like a true beginning.
He said heâd pay us a modest salary, and that we could use it to buy what we needed ourselves.
Once we had dropped off our belongings, we went back to the Chief Engineer to receive our work assignments.
Nocty and I were assigned to engine core tuning.
It was delicate work that required adjusting the wavelength of a coreâa process that demanded expert skill.
To gain that skillâcalled wave controlâthe Chief lent me a tunerâs Star Crystal.
With it, Nocty temporarily changed his class to Tuner.
That was when he explained to me in detail how the class change system worked:
- Once youâve taken on a class, you can freely switch between them afterward.
- However, the number of classes you can âstoreâ depends on your crystalâs rank.
- And this powerâonly a Starlingâs contractor can use it.
(Starling⌠huh. Even now, I canât quite believe Iâm wielding something this extraordinary.)
According to Nocty, this class-change technology used to be commonplace long ago.
Meanwhile, Mileâby her own requestâwas put in charge of cabin and hull design.
She was told to start by drafting several design proposals.
The Chief mentioned that heâd always struggled with creating designs that appealed to women, so her timing was perfect.
And one more thingâ
when we shared some leftovers during lunch, it somehow led to Mile being officially put in charge of cooking for everyone.
She was thrilled about it.
âââ
Gearbergâs summer was bright, with a blazing sun and fresh winds that swept through the skies.
Amid that season, the three of us began our days of work and training at Granâs workshop.
Mornings started early.
By the time we opened the workshop doors, before the sun had fully risen, the Chief was already there.
During the day, we took turns tuning cores, learning about airship components, and checking test runs.
At night, Mileâs warm homemade dinners marked the end of each day.
Her cooking quickly became a favorite among the other craftsmen.
By lunchtime, weâd hear things like, âIf she opened a shop, Iâd eat there every day!â or âLet me introduce her to my son!ââhalf jokes, half serious.
At first, the work had been confusing and difficult.
But as the seasons changed, my hands and body naturally learned the rhythm of the workshop.
I was especially praised for the precision of my wave control during tuning.
Through the Starling, I could feel the resonance of the engine coreâits rhythmâand adjust it until it was perfectly in sync.
ââŚThis core runs this quietly now. Excellent work.â
When the Chief said that, I could feel how much Iâd grown. It made me truly happy.
Mile was making great progress, too.
Her cabin designs featured soft, flowing curves that gave the ship a graceful yet refined beauty.
She kept saying, âI still have a long way to go,â but I knew the Chief secretly said,
âShe has a rare sense for balancing practicality and aesthetics.â
As the new year came and the signs of spring returned, one day the Chief called out to me while I was resting after work.
ââCome with me.â
He led me underground, to a locked room that only he ever entered.
ââŚWhat is this place?â
âThis is the special engine core vault.â
The Chief placed his hand gently on a silver crystal resting on a pedestal at the center of the room.
It radiated a presence unlike any other core Iâd ever seenâpowerful, dignified, and alive.
âI want you to tune this.â
âMâMe?â
âYeah. Youâre ready. Youâve earned it.â
Without another word, he stepped back and left me alone with it.
I stared at that âspecial engine coreâ for a while.
Nocty appeared from the ring, inspecting it curiously from every angle.
âThis isnât just any core. The density, the structure, the way the power flows⌠this thingâs definitely a relic.â
âA relic⌠so it is something special.â
My Star Crystal began to hum softlyâas if the stone itself had been waiting for me all along.
Eventually, after a long struggle, I managed to finish the tuning.
ââŚItâs time,â the Chief murmured one day.
âEh?â
âYouâve all worked hard and grown beyond my expectations. Soânext month, weâll begin building your airship.â
âReally⌠our own shipâŚ?â
âOf course. You already tuned the core for it, didnât you?â
I gasped.
So thatâs why he had entrusted me with that special core.
And thus, the construction of our airship finally began.
When we received the blueprint, we were speechless.
What we saw wasnât like any airship weâd ever seen before.
It was sleek, strong, and elegantâlike a vision of the future itself.
ââŚThis looks kind of like the Luvinas.â
When I muttered that, the Chief gave a small grin.
âOf course it does. Itâs based on the same conceptâthis is the design I drew long ago for my ideal airship. One I once gave up on.â
It was a dream heâd had in his youth, a design no one else had ever seen.
And it was incredible.
The âgravity control frameâ technologyâalso used in the Luvinasâallowed agile turns and acceleration while reducing strain on the pilot.
The âmulti-layer barrier systemâ offered damage resistance far beyond any existing model.
And the âspecial engine coreâ we tuned provided immense output and endless customization potential.
âBut⌠can we really have something this amazing?â
I asked, and the Chief replied in his usual gruff tone:
âThis ship only came to life because of the engine core that Sergio brought me.â
âCommander SergioâŚ?â
âYeah. He said, âUse this for Skyâs ship.ââ
There was a deep weight in his voice.
âTo be honest, no existing ship could withstand that kind of power. But⌠this design could. So I decided to build it.â
I was speechless.
I hadnât known Sergio had gone to such lengths for me.
âHeâs known about you for a long time,â the Chief added.
ââŚWhat?â
âI donât know the details. Never asked. If you want answers, ask him yourself.â
He turned and walked away, leaving me with the core pulsing faintly before meâ
as if urging me to awaken its true power.
The entire workshop came together for the construction.
Frame shaping, circuit weaving, installing the tuned coreâ
step by step, the airship took form.
Everyone could feel it: this wasnât just another vessel.
ââŚIf we unleashed its full power, this one ship could probably take on an entire fleet.â
Someone joked.
No one laughed.
Because it wasnât really a joke.
To prevent disaster, safety seals and output limiters were placed on the core.
Its true power still slumbered within.
And thenâthe day of completion arrived.
The massive hangar doors slowly opened.
Bathed in the morning light, the silver-white ship emerged in silence.
Its streamlined body gleamed with both grace and strength.
From bow to stern, it looked like a shooting star ready to soar through the heavens.
Everyone held their breath as I stepped forward.
The Starling on my finger blazed with light.
The core answered with a deep, resonant humâ
a sound of awakening, of reunion between ship and master.
I placed my hand gently on its hull.
A warmth pulsed back through my palmâour rhythms, beating as one.
âThis is⌠our shipâŚâ
Behind me, Mile asked softly:
âWhat will you name it?â
âI already decided. A long time ago.â
Looking up at the sky, I answered:
âLuminark.â
A name born from my parentsâLuke and Lumina.
With this ship, I felt we could go anywhere.
Beyond the horizonâinto worlds still unknown.
Hereâs the full English translation of ăćăŽč¨ćśďźEP02ăććă˘ăšăăźăŤă (Star Memory: EP02 â Planet Astele):
Star Memory: Â Planet Astele
â Star Year 3037 â
Outside the window stretched the endless blackness of space.
An infinite sea of stars, twinkling like fragments of time itself.
Each shimmer of distant starlight seemed to draw oneâs consciousness into the gaps between moments, into eternity.
How many generations of humanity have gazed upon this same sky, I wonderedâ
âbut my reverie was cut short by an incoming transmission.
âCaptain Amagi. Command from the Stellar Federation Headquartersâ you are ordered to report to Central Command immediately.â
âUnderstood. Inform them Iâll depart right away.â
Amagi stepped into the stationâs omni-lift â a three-dimensional elevator â which glided smoothly through the geometrically layered corridors of the structure.
The walls along the passage to Command glowed with a soft, living light, and countless floating data windows illuminated the air.
In stark contrast to the darkness of space outside, there was not a trace of shadow here. Everything shone with quiet brilliance.
The door to Central Command slid open in response to Amagiâs approach, parting silently.
The light spilling from within was gentler than the corridorâs white glare â calm, steady, almost sacred.
The chamber beyond was circular, with a strategic holo-table at its center. Around it stood several high-ranking officers.
Amagi saluted smartly and reported in a clear, composed voice.
âTsukasa Amagi, reporting as ordered.â
After a moment of silence, one of the generals at the table nodded slowly.
âIâll get straight to the point, Captain. Thereâs a survey mission I want you to handle.â
He raised a finger, tracing coordinates across the holo-table.
Instantly, a planet appeared, suspended as a three-dimensional projection above the surface.
âYouâve heard of Planet Astele: Ί018754, havenât you?â
Amagi looked up at the image. âYes, of course.â
Roughly a thousand years agoâ
That planet had been destroyed, the Old Deep Space Fleet annihilated, and only a handful of colony ships survived.
A catastrophe without precedent.
The general lowered his gaze and exhaled softly.
âRecently, anomalous energy readings have been detected in that region. I want you to investigate.â
âI thought that route was sealed off long ago?â
The generalâs face tightened slightly, his tone dropping.
âIt was. But the situation has changed.â
âThe Ixionâthose machine lifeforms that just joined the Federationâmade the lifting of that blockade one of their conditions for membership.â
âIxion⌠the synthetic race?â
âCorrect. A collective of advanced artificial intelligences â a true civilization species.â
Amagi nodded. He knew the data, but didnât understand the connection.
âWhy are they so fixated on that region?â
After a pause, the general replied gravely.
âAccording to Ixionâs own statements, something on Planet Astele: Ί018754 may hold the key to their speciesâ further evolution. Thatâs why they insist on investigating the area.â
âBut⌠isnât that dangerous?â
The general gave a small nod.
âIâve raised that concern many times myself. But the Federation leadership is obsessed with expanding its member sectors. Their sense of risk has dulled.â
A trace of frustration flickered in his eyes.
âI see. So the ones who pay the price for their ambitions are usâthe field officers.â
The general didnât deny it. He only sighed and continued, voice heavy with guilt.
âIâm sorry. As compensation, your mission will have authorization to use our newest ship â the Orpheus.â
âThe Orpheus? The vessel incorporating Ixionâs provided technology?â
He nodded.
âYes. Its performance is proven. But⌠thereâs something to be aware of. Some of that technology is sealed in a black box. We donât fully understand its inner workings.â
âBlack-boxed technologyâŚâ
âThe higher-ups believe the potential benefits outweigh the risks. Typical.â
He shook his head, resignation creeping into his tone.
âEither way, we canât ignore an anomaly of this magnitude. The mission is yours, Captain. Depart as soon as youâre ready.â
âYes, sir. Iâll begin preparations immediately.â
â Stellar Federation Deep-Space Survey Vessel â
âCaptain, weâre approaching the target sector.â
âGood. Put it on the main monitor.â
Projected before them was a space frozen in time.
A thousand years unchangedâ
Silent. Still.
As if the war that once raged here had never happened.
âAny anomalies on the sensors?â
âNone detected.â
âAlright. Ready the probe launchers.â
âProbes prepped and standing by.â
âFire.â
Six probes glided silently into the center of the designated region.
âCaptain, Iâm detecting slight irregularities near the central coordinates.â
Thenâ
âWhat⌠they vanished!?â
âCaptain! All probes lost!â
âWhat happened? Were they destroyed?â
âNo signs of any attack or energy discharge.â
The shipâs emergency protocols kicked in instantly, all departments scrambling to analyze the data.
In the middle of the confusion, an intelligence officer discovered something buried deep in the logs.
âCaptain⌠this confirms it. Somethingâs being hidden from us.â
He pointed to a waveform on the holo-table.
âAccording to the system, this log was marked âno anomaly,â but it actually recorded faint traces of an unknown spatial wave. The threshold for anomaly detection has been set absurdly highâso high it shouldâve been flagged instantly.â
âWho tampered with it?â
Amagiâs voice sharpened.
âThe signature shows âIxion Internal Protocol: Core-RX-Îľ.â
Itâs an encrypted masking program built into the technology they supplied.â
âSo theyâve been hiding something from the start⌠making sure weâd never see whatâs really out here.â
âIt seems they anticipated that the Federation would send a survey vessel to this area.â
Amagi stood slowly, eyes fixed on the empty void where the probes had disappeared.
No light. No heat. No gravity distortion.
Every sensor insisted nothing existed there.
And yetâ
Something was there.
Invisible, but undeniably present.
â Ixion Flagship â
A classified meeting was underway between Ixion military leaders and engineers.
âIs the plan proceeding as projected?â
âNo issues. The âinterference bodyâ within the Zero Point remains dormant. We can proceed to the next phase of adjustments.â
âWhat about the Federationâs survey ship?â
âTheyâve attempted to transmit to headquarters, but all signals are being blocked.â
âThen⌠all that remains is to wait for the interference event.â
The Ixion representativeâs eyes were like clear glassâutterly devoid of emotion.
â Stellar Federation Deep-Space Survey Vessel Orpheus â
âCaptain! Communication with Federation Command has been severed! Likely due to external interference!â
âWhat!? Jamming? It must be the Ixion!â
âWeâre tracing the signal source nowâjust a few more minutes!â
âDamn itâŚ! All hands, prepare for emergency retreat! Weâre leaving this sector at once!â
And thenâ
âCaptain, new readings from the center of the target zone⌠itâs⌠itâs likeâŚâ
The operatorâs voice trembled.
âD-darknessâŚâ
Someone whispered under their breath.
What had been thereâwas gone.
No⌠not gone.
Even the concept of its existence had been erased.
A perfect void.
No light, no gravity, no energy.
Sensors failed. Data refused to record.
It was an abyss â pure nothingness, spreading rapidly.
Its boundaries were indistinct, but its expansion was undeniable.
Just looking at it made reality itself feel like it was unraveling.
Everyone on the bridge understoodâ
Something had begun.
And thenâ
The survey vessel Orpheus was swallowed by the void.