“But Hannah has the Mujahadin.”
“…” Reynald paused, contemplating. “Our forces comprise almost one third of the Fleet. I don’t think Hannah is devoted enough to her cause to destroy one third of her safety net. We’ll regroup in an uncharted When, build our offensive from there. Chances are that the program command codes have been compromised already. If the Mujahadin fail, if Kilbourne’s allies turn against her, she’ll have to turn to us to save her. She won’t risk everything. Kilbourne may be a traitor, but she’s smart.”
“And if you’re wrong?”
“If I’m wrong, we’re damned.”
Sapphire sighed, drifting in her mind to a time seven years ago, when she was led into a spherical chamber at Command along with a large group of other children. A brilliant light emanated from the center of the chamber.
A voice. Hannah’s voice.
“Enter the light, my children, and become Judas.”
A flash of pain pleasure bliss hell. A shifting within her—
“Sapphire?”
“Where will we go?”
“I don’t know. An uncharted When. Somewhere not even Hannah can find us. We’ll hide out there, gathering our forces, preparing. And when Hannah’s plan fails, we’ll emerge from hiding and end this war forever.”
“When do we make our move?”
“Mara? How are the preparations proceeding?”
(loyalist forces report full readiness.)
“Sapphire, are you with us or against us?”
She closed her eyes, took a deep breath.
“Sapphire?”
“With you. Let’s go.”
Hannah Kilbourne.
A darkened room, a darkened soul.
How could Sapphire have found out?
She sighed, shifted in her chair as she awaited the combeacon’s arrival. It would be soon now.
She had never anticipated this position, this status. Kilbourne had been one of the first Judas, uploaded by Richter himself in those mad, tumultuous days before they had abandoned the future forever.
And then the slaughter of the resurrender had come upon them and Richter was engulfed in the heavenly infernos of hell. When Richter had…died, Kilbourne deftly took over his position.
Oh, how this insane war had taken its toll.
She knew she had made a deal with the devil.
But the threat of the Enemy, the primary code Enemy, was too great. Risks had to be taken. Sacrifices had to be made.
Alliances had to be forged. Out of necessity and desperation.
The Alternities were the perfect opportunity.
She had made a good show of it: the development of the Golgotha fleet, the race to contain the new threat, these alternate realities, these alternate eternities. At the beginning, she had believed they were a danger to the Judas, but then she had seen the possibilities.
These were not the same Enemy she had been fighting, and she recognized this almost immediately. The variation in code was amazing. Some were weaker, almost harmless, and some were terrifyingly more powerful.
She had made her move.
With the Judas focused on the alternity threat and the Omega threat in the Stream War, she had commissioned the secret construction of an additional one hundred Golgotha vessels, supposedly to be pumped into different alternities as reinforcements.
Hannah had other plans.
Armed with this tremendous force, Hannah and several close allies from Command led the covert force into a particular alternity that had caught her eye: Sapphire’s alternity. The alternity of the resurrender.
Hannah had seen footage from several battles Sapphire had sent back to the Command research archives, and this Enemy fascinated her.
They were so very unlike the primary code Enemy. This program of Black cared nothing of the Purpose. They cared nothing of souls or patterns or ascension to godhood. In this fragment of the Whenstream, this shattered bit of impossible history, the Enemy was voracious, killing everything in its path, not reaping souls but sending them to their makers. They cared nothing of Omega. They cared nothing of godhood. They swept outward, conquering as much of the alternity’s universe as they could.
Hannah saw her advantage and struck.
The Judas controlled the portal, the entry and exit point to and from this alternity into the Stream. Hannah could offer Sapphire’s Enemy the promise of infinite other universes to conquer in the form of the infinite emulated worlds of the Stream, if they gave the Judas assistance in destroying the primary code Enemy.
After all, what was the sacrifice of only a few trillion humans in the alternate eternities if it would guarantee the continuation of existence itself?
And, Hannah thought, after the primary code Enemy was eliminated, what would prevent her from turning the full brunt of the Judas Fleet upon the rogue code Enemy from the alternities?
After all, alliances weren’t really meant to last, were they?
So, armed with a fleet of one hundred Golgotha-class vessels, Kilbourne had entered the alternity, unknown to that brat Sapphire. Kilbourne knew that Sapphire was half a galaxy away, immersed in fierce battle. She would never know.
The fleet was not Shadowed, and they would be seen by any Enemy in the area, just as Hannah had planned it.
In an instant, the Black were upon them, raging, tearing, destroying, but the Golgotha were ready, and the small force of the Enemy were dispatched without incident, disabled, but not all completely destroyed.
Hannah made her move.
Her vessel, the Lazarus II, drew the closest Enemy intimately close, and attempted to open a comlink to the helpless vessel. When they would not respond, Hannah mercilessly tore the Enemy vessel apart.
With such a show of force already under her belt, she broadcast her terms on a wideband to all of the Enemy. She did not want to destroy any more Enemy vessels, but she would if she met further resistance. If she met further resistance, she had the power to collapse this strand of code and eliminate it from the Stream entirely.
Her message was simple. She could offer the Enemy infinite other universes in return for their support in destroying the primary code Enemy. If the Purpose was completed, if the primary code Enemy were allowed to upload the whole of the physical universe, the Stream would collapse, and so would the alternities. In essence, the primary code Enemy from the Whenstream was the enemy of Sapphire’s rogue code Black as well as the Judas. If they worked together, the threat would be destroyed for both of them.
And if they helped her, Hannah could give them the keys to so, so many other realities…
The Enemy forces were silent.
Hannah told them to consider her offer, and in a few days a single Judas would be sent to transport the rogue core patterns to Command if they chose to accept her offer. If any harm came to the Judas, the alternity would be collapsed. With that, Hannah piloted the Lazarus II and the rest of the fleet back to the heavily-guarded When-hole portal into Sapphire’s alternity. The Black floated in silence as she departed.
Once back at Command, she summoned Captain Jean Reynald of the Gethsemane Magdalene, a close friend. She detailed the mission to him as he looked on in utter shock and disbelief. At the end of the briefing, he stormed from her chamber to his ship. She assigned two Golgotha to escort Magdalene to the alternity entrance, just to ensure that Reynald would carry out the orders.
But Magdalene tore off across the Stream at the last moment, disobeying direct orders. Hannah realized that if word of her plan spread to the whole fleet, it could unravel everything she had worked so hard for. If Magdalene talked…
Hannah ordered the Golgotha to pursue her and destroy her if necessary. She could take no risks.
They chased Magdalene across time into an uncharted When, but before they could eliminate her, the Enemy was upon her.
The void between the stars was torn open, and for an instant, a darker Blackness existed.
The world became light, and the Judas Magdalene fell to her destiny.