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The diversion worked too well. Varex was smarter than the crew had banked on. He had grafted ears to satellites and sold his conscience to the highest bidder. The Lumen's emergency lights melted to red as Varex’s collectors swarmed like wasps.

They kept moving, through asteroid gardens and customs checkpoints where officials smiled on official bribes. Echo learned their names quickly: Rook, who taught her how to patch a conduit and how to make a list of things to do tomorrow; Mira, who taught her to scrounge beats from ship noise; Grobnar, who taught her the cathartic power of a bowl of warm stew; Jessa, who taught her that not everyone who first looks like a threat intends to be one.

They charted a course toward a small, anonymous planet where a music conservatory took in peculiar children. Nova enrolled; she learned to weave her hum into instruments, to shape frequencies into maps, to bend wires into lullabies that could heal or break. Rook learned to loosen his lists, to write an extra line: “Protect family.” Mira learned to make silence into rhythm. Grobnar opened a diner. Jessa bought a cabin with a view of the stars and slept without one eye open. download guardians of the galaxy vol 2 201 link

That night, the Lumen simmered with plans. Varex’s scouts were closing in. The crew would split: Rook and Mira would make a diversion; Jessa would take Echo to the registry; Grobnar would make sure the food brought down morale; Five would run interference. It was a good plan because it was reckless and made of hope.

Defeated by something softer than bullets, the collectors retreated. Nova stood in the corridor, cheeks smeared with oil and laughter, and Rook finally let a list go unsaid: this could be home. Jessa, who had arrived to pick her up, looked at Nova with wet eyes she’d thought long dried years ago. Grobnar offered a bowl; Mira pressed a pair of headphones into Nova’s hands and said, “You can make beats of the cosmos, kid.” The diversion worked too well

The attackers were not discreet. They came in a braid of black fast boats, phosphorescent decals like shark teeth. The lead ship hailed: “Surrender the child and your lives will be spared!” A classic pirate line, they all thought. Then Echo sang.

“Keep it down,” Rook grumbled. He was the sort who kept lists. Lists made sense; people did not. The Lumen's emergency lights melted to red as

When the warning klaxons screamed, it was the wrong sound for the wrong place: melancholy bell tones that echoed Echo’s hum. Rook reached for his blaster even as his mind made lists of contingencies. Mira rolled into the corridor like a comet, flaring color and attitude. Grobnar hefted pans and whatever counted for weapons among his culinary utensils. Jessa's old railgun hummed awake, a tired star.