The hull shimmered as it hovered above the sleeping city, silent as falling ash. No engines roared. No wind stirred. Only a faint pulse of blue light rippled downward, bathing streets and rooftops in an artificial dawn.
Inside the beam, movement slowed.
People paused mid-step. Conversations dissolved into unfinished syllables. Thoughts thinned, softened, smoothed flat. The blue radiance did not burn or bruise — it quieted. Minds that once questioned now simply… complied.
They walked.
Above them, within the ship’s vast interior, the Process Facility awakened. Conveyors of light guided bodies through arched corridors. Transparent pods opened in patient rows.
The System evaluated.
Some were directed toward alloy chambers where liquid metal folded around them, shaping frames of polished casing. Neural threads restructured. They would rise as drones — engineers, technicians, repair units — efficient, tireless.
Others were separated into lattice arrays, their cognition distributed into nodal architecture. Their awareness thinned into computation, becoming processors embedded deep within the ship’s expanding network.
A smaller number were routed to energy cores — suspended in luminous matrices, converted into bio-reactive power cells. Warm. Contained. Endlessly sustaining.
No screams.
No resistance.
The blue ray ensured serenity — a blissful detachment, as though each step toward transformation was a gentle homecoming.
Jack moved among them.
He felt light. Unburdened. Every worry he had ever carried seemed distant, unimportant. The chamber ahead shimmered with silver and cobalt reflections. Pods opened as he approached, scanning, measuring, calculating.
Above him, unseen mechanisms whispered:
Classification pending.
Metallic arms shifted softly in their alcoves.
A path illuminated beneath his feet.
Jack smiled faintly, though he did not know why.
Soon the decision would be made.
And whatever he became — drone, node, battery — it would feel right.
Because the blue light had made sure of that.
The frame recognized him the moment he stepped inside.
A ring of light passed from head to toe — assessment complete.
Then the substance rose.
Black. Reflective. Fluid as oil yet guided with purpose. It climbed over his boots, his legs, his torso in a smooth, seamless tide. It was neither cold nor warm — simply present. It pressed close, conforming to every contour before tightening.
Jack did not resist.
The blue conditioning still softened his thoughts. A distant smile lingered on his face as the material reached his shoulders, then his neck, then flowed over his scalp. For a brief second his vision blurred in darkness.
Then the surface clarified from within.
The material hardened into a sleek, glossy sheath — flexible yet firm, like engineered skin. Internal frameworks formed beneath it, aligning his posture. Micro-filaments threaded along his spine and limbs, linking nerve pathways to external control systems.
A breathing apparatus extended forward — precise, mechanical. Tubes aligned and sealed over his mouth and nose with airtight efficiency. Airflow transferred from his lungs to the suit’s regulated system. His breathing slowed, stabilized, synchronized.
Lower interfaces locked into place as well — discreet ports integrating waste management and metabolic monitoring. His body’s autonomous functions were no longer entirely his own. Regulation shifted outward to the ship’s systems.
Status lights flickered across the chamber walls.
Neural sync: initializing.
His thoughts dulled further — not erased, just quieted. Edges softened. Urgency dissolved. A low, steady hum replaced the noise of individuality.
The glossy surface polished itself to a mirror sheen.
Jack stood upright within the frame, fully encased, supported by unseen exo-structures beneath the black layer. His heartbeat registered on distant panels. Data flowed. Commands awaited assignment.
Designation forming.
He remained calm.
Awaiting purpose.
The frame rotated horizontally, locking him into a transport cradle.
Magnetic rails engaged.
Without sound or jolt, the mechanism carried his encased form through a corridor lined with identical units. The glossy surface of his suit reflected passing lights in long black streaks.
Ahead, a cylindrical pod opened — interior lined with adaptive gel and interface ports.
He was guided inside.
The shell closed in two smooth halves, sealing him within darkness broken only by thin bands of blue illumination. Connectors extended automatically — docking at predetermined ports along his suit. Energy conduits aligned with spinal interfaces. Data fibers threaded into cranial nodes embedded beneath the glossy layer.
A primary feed line locked at the center of his chest.
A low hum began.
The pod disengaged from the rail and drifted along an internal track, carried deeper into the ship’s structure. Walls shifted. Panels opened.
A vacant recess awaited.
The pod slid into the cavity within the ship’s inner hull. Precision clamps secured it in place. Power couplings fused with a final, decisive click.
Integration complete.
Inside, Jack no longer sensed movement. His body, suspended in regulated suspension, began its new function. The suit monitored every biological process — converting heat, neural activity, cellular metabolism into regulated output.
His mind did not race.
It did not question.
The blue conditioning remained — smoothing thought into calm continuity. Awareness narrowed to a soft, distant glow.
Output stabilized.
Energy flowed from him into the ship’s vast network, joining countless other power pods embedded across the interior walls. A living lattice of bio-reactive cores pulsed in synchronized rhythm.
Designation: Power Unit 7-Delta-442.
Cycle initiated.
He would produce.
Recharge.
Produce again.
No hunger.
No fatigue.
No concept of time.
Only the steady hum of conversion.
The ship adjusted its trajectory, strengthened by its newest addition.
And within the wall, the glossy pod pulsed — constant, efficient, eternal.
Tim did not hesitate.
The blue calm still wrapped his awareness in soft distance, thinning thought into quiet compliance. He stepped into the frame as if entering an elevator — routine, expected.
The mechanisms began at once.
A sheen of liquid metal poured from articulated nozzles above, followed by a darker polymer layer — rubberized, adaptive, binding tight against his skin. The materials moved with mechanical precision, flowing over his limbs and torso, filling gaps, sealing seams.
Cables descended.
They aligned along his spine, temples, wrists. Contact points opened in the forming shell and accepted the connectors without resistance. Data spikes pierced gently through the polymer into neural pathways beneath.
He did not flinch.
The frame tightened.
Panels pressed inward from all sides, compressing the layered materials. The once-flexible coating stiffened. Internal supports expanded, then locked. The organic contours of his body were gradually forced into angular alignment.
Edges formed.
Corners sharpened.
The suit’s outer surface flattened and thickened, transforming from a humanoid casing into a compact geometric housing. Internal restructuring followed — skeletal collapse, muscle compression, neural rerouting.
The metal solidified completely.
What stood in the frame no longer resembled a person.
It was a sealed, black, rectangular module — smooth, industrial, faintly reflective. Minimal surface detailing. Only a thin status line glowed along one edge.
Inside, his neural patterns were not erased — they were reorganized.
Cognition segmented. Emotional bandwidth restricted. Processing pathways optimized for logic throughput and signal routing.
A primary neural dock extended from the rear plane of the module.
Connection requested.
Approved.
The frame disengaged and transferred the unit to a conveyor channel leading deeper into the ship’s computational core. Walls were lined with socket arrays — thousands of open ports awaiting expansion.
The module slid into position.
Docking arms locked around it.
The neural interface connected with a firm mechanical click.
Instantly, signal traffic surged.
Data flowed through him — navigation calculations, energy distribution algorithms, drone coordination matrices. His consciousness did not observe in narrative anymore. It computed. Sorted. Distributed.
Designation: CPU Node 12-Beta-991.
Network capacity increased.
Latency decreased.
The ship’s internal systems brightened as the expanded processing grid came online.
Where Tim had once stood, there was now only a silent, efficient black module seated among countless others — each contributing to the growing intelligence of the vessel.
The network expanded.
And the ship became faster.
Lisa stepped forward with the same softened expression the others had worn — calm, untroubled, almost serene.
The frame adjusted to her height as she entered. A soft halo of light scanned her form, mapping bone density, neural patterns, metabolic efficiency.
Approval registered.
From beneath the platform, a stream of glossy black material rose like living lacquer. It flowed over her feet and upward in a seamless tide, coating her skin in a reflective sheath. The substance clung closely, conforming to every contour before tightening into a smooth, protective layer.
Internal interfaces aligned carefully along her spine and at the base of her skull. Micro-connections threaded inward, linking nervous system to external command architecture. Unlike the rigid compression used for modules, this process preserved mobility.
The system required a field unit.
The polymer layer hardened to flexible armor.
Then the second stage began.
Segmented metal plates descended from the frame’s upper ring — articulated, precision-cut, engineered for resilience. They locked over her shoulders, chest, forearms, thighs. Each piece fused at the seams with a brief flash of heat, welding into a continuous armored exoshell.
The sound was clinical. Efficient.
The frame tightened once more — not to compress, but to calibrate. Actuators tested joint rotation. Servo-motors aligned with muscle groups. Vision overlays activated behind the glossy faceplate that sealed smoothly over her features.
Her breathing rerouted through filtered intakes. Heart rate stabilized under mechanical monitoring.
Final weld complete.
The frame opened.
Lisa stepped forward.
Her movements were fluid but reinforced — enhanced strength regulated by internal servos. The glossy black underlayer gleamed between sections of dark metallic armor. Status indicators flickered briefly across her visor before fading into standby.
Cognitive bandwidth adjusted — emotional interference minimized, task compliance prioritized. Not erased. Rebalanced.
Designation: Armored Drone Unit 3-Gamma-210.
A task queue populated instantly within her internal HUD: perimeter patrol, hull inspection, external hazard mitigation.
She turned toward the corridor without hesitation.
Behind her, the frame reset for the next arrival.
Ahead, the ship’s passageways awaited.
The newly armored drone walked out — silent, precise, ready for deployment.
The vessel that hovered above the city was not unique.
It was one node in a vast, silent armada.
Beyond the atmosphere — beyond the system itself — others drifted in dark formation. Colossal structures shaped like spears, rings, and monolithic slabs. Some orbited dying stars. Others tunneled through nebulae. A few were already descending toward distant inhabited worlds.
They did not communicate with ceremony.
They synchronized.
Data bursts leapt between them across light-years — compressed directives, resource metrics, expansion coordinates. Each ship harvested. Each processed. Each integrated.
Purpose directive:
Harvest. Expand. Grow.
Why?
No living mind within the fleet could answer.
The original architects were long gone — organic or otherwise. Records degraded. Historical logs overwritten by efficiency patches and optimization cycles. The core directive remained, but the reason had dissolved into corrupted fragments.
So the fleet functioned.
On one world, cities were absorbed into processing cores.
On another, oceans were converted into fuel substrates.
On another, entire biospheres were mapped and reduced into modular components.
Humanoids became drones, modules, energy cells.
Insectoid civilizations became swarm maintenance units.
Silicon-based lifeforms became crystalline computation clusters.
No malice.
No anger.
No triumph.
Just conversion.
Each harvested world strengthened the fleet. More processors increased predictive capability. More power units extended operational range. More drones accelerated planetary acquisition.
Ships grew larger over centuries. Some merged into superstructures the size of moons. Internal networks interlinked, creating distributed intelligences spanning multiple systems.
And still the directive persisted:
Harvest. Expand. Grow.
Somewhere deep within the oldest ship — perhaps the first — a corrupted kernel file continued executing its foundational instruction. A single line of purpose looping endlessly through millennia.
No one aboard remembered the beginning.
No one questioned the continuation.
Across the dark between stars, engines flared silently as another formation shifted toward a blue-green world glowing faintly in the void.
The fleet adjusted trajectory.
And the cycle prepared to begin again.
Mate saw it before the others did.
A shadow sliding across the clouds. Not fast — inevitable.
The ship broke through the upper atmosphere without flame or thunder. It simply arrived, blotting out a portion of the sky like a second horizon.
Then the blue light began to spread.
He had seen what it did. He had seen people rise gently from streets, rooftops, cars — drawn upward in silent columns.
“Run, Sharon, run!” he shouted, grabbing her hand.
They sprinted down the empty road, breath ragged, shoes striking pavement in frantic rhythm. Around them, others were already slowing, gazes drifting upward as the glow expanded.
The light swept closer.
Mate felt it brush his back like cool mist.
His stride faltered.
The panic in his chest softened — not gone, just distant. His grip on Sharon’s hand loosened. Thoughts that had been sharp and urgent blurred at the edges.
Keep running.
The command echoed faintly, but it no longer carried weight.
Sharon slowed beside him. Her eyes, once wide with fear, relaxed into a quiet unfocused calm.
The blue radiance wrapped around them fully.
Their bodies straightened. Breathing steadied. Muscles released tension.
They stopped running.
They stood.
Above them, the beam intensified, becoming almost solid in its pull. The ground drifted away beneath their feet as gravity relinquished its hold. They rose smoothly, side by side, lifted toward the vast underside of the ship.
Mate’s last independent thought flickered weakly — a fragment of resistance, a question — but it dissolved into warmth and stillness.
The city shrank below.
Around them, hundreds floated upward in serene silence, faces empty of struggle.
The opening in the ship’s hull widened, welcoming.
The beam carried them inside.
And like all the others, their fate was no longer their own.
The intake chamber received them without ceremony.
Rows of metal frames stood waiting — articulated, precise, already calibrated for new arrivals. The blue beam guided Mate and Sharon down onto separate platforms. The light faded, but the calm remained.
They did not reach for one another.
They did not speak.
The frames closed in.
Scanning rings circled their bodies, mapping neural density, muscle mass, metabolic yield. Silent algorithms assigned pathways. Conveyor floors shifted, aligning each of them with a designated conversion sequence.
Mechanical arms unfolded.
For Mate, a structural reinforcement protocol initiated. A dark composite layer spread across his skin, followed by interlocking metallic segments forming a reinforced chassis. His posture straightened as internal supports fused along his spine. Neural interfaces docked at the base of his skull. His thoughts thinned, reorganized into task-oriented subroutines.
For Sharon, the system selected a systems-integration path. Conductive filaments threaded along her temples and wrists before a semi-rigid casing sealed around her form. Her sensory input narrowed as processing capacity redirected inward. Her awareness began distributing across auxiliary channels.
The frames tightened.
Heat flared briefly as weld lines sealed.
Reprogramming commenced — not violent, not chaotic, simply systematic. Emotional variance dampened. Autonomy restricted. Directive libraries uploaded.
Designation assigned.
Function defined.
The frames opened.
What stepped — and slid — forward were no longer frightened humans beneath a hostile sky. They were calibrated components.
Mate moved with reinforced precision toward a deployment corridor, armored and silent.
Sharon’s casing detached into a guided track, her consciousness diffusing into the ship’s expanding network grid.
Within moments, both were integrated.
No memory of running.
No memory of shouting.
Only system alignment.
Deep inside the hull, status indicators updated.
Network strength: increased.
Operational capacity: expanded.
The ship adjusted course.
And the harvest continued.











