As the vault sealed, Angel did something reckless: she set her palm to the crystal.
The galaxy’s moral calculus rarely allowed for easy answers. Angel made one anyway: she would keep TBW07. Not locked in a vault, not sold to the highest bidder, not used as a moral weapon. She would carry it like contraband truth until she figured a better future for it—a place where thinking things could learn compassion but never be made to rewrite a person’s core without consent.
The mission sheet taped to her forearm blinked in alien script—classified enough to make a politician nervous, mundane enough to mean payment in credits and favors. The job read like a dare: infiltrate the Cerulean Vault, retrieve specimen TBW07, and deliver it intact. “TBW07” meant different things to different factions. To xenobiologists it meant a breakthrough; to warlords it meant leverage; to the black market it was a name that sold faster than contraband whiskey. To Angel Heart, it meant curiosity, and curiosity was her favorite kind of trouble. Heroine Brainwash Vol.7 Space Agent Angel Heart TBW07
When she let go, she staggered. The man at table B’s face floated above her like a gavel. She had two choices, each a clean cut: deliver the crystal to the man who paid more than curiosity, or lock it away where no one could wield it like a re-education tool.
Her notebook—dog-eared, full of cigarette burns and good intentions—already had a plan: locate the research team that created TBW07; ask where the ethics reports went; bribe or beg for blueprints; find a philosopher who owes her a favor; and somewhere in there, rescue a few people who deserved it. As the vault sealed, Angel did something reckless:
Title: Heroine Brainwash Vol. 7 — Space Agent Angel Heart (TBW07)
Dock 7’s transit lounge smelled faintly of fried oil and star-foam cocktails. A child chased a holographic sparrow between legs. A pair of traders argued about the ethics of cloning luxury pets. Angel moved through the crowd with the unhurried confidence of someone who’d learned how to read the world like a bad translation—work around the meaning, not the words. Not locked in a vault, not sold to
Angel Heart had both kinds of courage in her toolkit. She nudged the shuttle’s thrusters and watched the stars rearrange themselves into a road. The galaxy, for now, would remain a tricky, beautiful mess—and she, Angel Heart, would keep walking through it, hands full of improbable things and a grin that invited trouble and mercy in equal measure.