So Kilews had done what she always did. She patched, jury-rigged, and prayed. She replaced the seal with a triple layer of thermal tape and whispered a plea to the Machine God her mother had taught her about. The drive rumbled to life, a surly, grudging sound.

She picked up her sonic spanner, not as a mechanic, but as a thief. And she went to open every single cage.

Her hands were always stained. Not with glory, but with engine oil from the old Kessler-9 drive that wheezed and coughed like a dying man. Captain Voss said the ship had a soul. Kilews said the ship had a leaking primary coolant seal, and if Voss didn’t sign off on the repair order, that soul was going to become a permanent, frozen ghost.

“Stow the chatter, Kilews,” Voss had grumbled that morning, slapping a data-slate onto her workbench. “We’ve got a priority run. Gilded trinkets to Velorum Prime. High pay. Low questions.”

“Kilews.”

They dropped out of warp into the Velorum system, and the trinkets weren't trinkets. Kilews saw the crates being loaded: not the usual coded polycarbon, but reinforced steel, humming with a cold she felt through her boots. She asked the loadmaster what was inside. He just winked and tapped his nose.

She stumbled back, slammed the cargo door, and ran to the bridge.