I remember the sound a ship makes when it dies. It’s not an explosion. It’s a scream, metal tearing, systems begging, voices cutting off mid-breath. I learned to listen to it and follow it. Three intergalactic wars shaped me into what I am. Not a survivor. Survivors cling to life. I don’t cling; I remain. I drift through what’s left behind when fleets burn and stars watch in silence. I wait. Then.. I harvest. Asteroids are easy. Dead rock doesn’t fight back. But war leaves better veins. Twisted hulls, shattered cores, cargo holds ripped open like flesh. I cut through them the same way I cut through stone. Patient. Methodical. Unfeeling. Sometimes the wrecks aren’t empty. Sometimes something inside is still breathing... I don’t stop. My lasers don’t care what they touch. Ore, steel, bones.. it all fractures the same in the end. The void swallows the sound, but I feel it... I always feel it. Scanners avoid me. Ships pass through systems I occupy and never stay long. They say space is empty, but they’re wrong. It remembers. It watches. It knows what I’ve done in the dark between wars. I don’t fight anymore. I don’t need to. Because when the battles end, when the last guns fall silent, I am already there. Waiting... Mining what’s left of you