“The planet is inhabited by primitives,” said Oracle, her eyes glowing faintly. “It lies on the frontier of the empire, and not much exploration of that system has been conducted.”
Kallark, otherwise known by the title Gladiator, looked at the screen before him and nodded. Gladiator was the strongest being in the empire, a Strontian who held the coveted title of Gladiator.
By holding the title, he was made Praetor of the Imperial Guard and had been protecting the empire for centuries. He had faced gods, dimensional invaders, cosmic entities. He had never fallen—never failed in his mission.
And now the time had come. He had to lead the Guard against the threat the Guard was made for.
To defeat the Phoenix.
The Imperial Guard had been created to defeat the Dark Phoenix Rook’shir the first host, who had nearly destroyed the Shi’ar Empire in an apocalyptic rampage that consumed seventeen worlds before being stopped. The first Guard had succeeded in that impossible task. It was the Gladiator of that era who had landed the finishing blow, destroying the host and driving the Phoenix away.
That warrior’s name was still spoken with reverence. That warrior’s example was the standard Gladiator had spent centuries trying to live up to.
So much was riding on them—on him. The entire empire. Trillions of lives across hundreds of star systems.
“Have you considered what the Chancellor requested?” asked Oracle.
Gladiator let out a frustrated exhale. The Chancellor of the Imperium and the Majestrix had given them two very different tasks, and the conflict between those orders weighed on him.
The Majestrix had asked them to kill the host of the Phoenix like the Guard had done many times in the past.
A clean solution.
A proven solution.
Destroy the host, scatter the Phoenix Force, drive it away from Shi’ar space.
But the Chancellor had come to them secretly with a different request: to find a way to capture her instead.
Gladiator had balked at the request immediately.
The Chancellor had explained that they had a way to permanently imprison the Phoenix if they could capture its host without destroying it. He had shown them a secret project that had been in the works for centuries.
Gladiator remembered the journey. They had traveled to the Great Void, a place just outside Shi’ar space where there were no stars for many light-years, only darkness and cold. And there, hidden in that emptiness, orbiting a near-dead star, was a prison.
It was built inside a planet the entire core hollowed out and replaced with a containment system of staggering complexity. Crystalline structures stretched for miles. Energy fields layered upon energy fields, each one designed to suppress cosmic power.
And there was an imitation of the M’Kraan crystal. There was so much of it that Gladiator could not believe such a quantity even existed. He knew how much it cost to create an imitation of it and they had somehow acquired enough to line an entire planetary prison. The cost must have been astronomical. The effort must have taken generations.
The Chancellor had told them this was the only chance to imprison the Phoenix permanently, that if they succeeded, the Shi’ar would never have to fear it again. The Chancellor had begged them to try to capture the host alive.
Should I risk it? Gladiator asked himself. If the Imperial Guard were to perish in the attempt, the empire was doomed. There would be no second line of defense. The Phoenix would burn unchecked through Shi’ar space.
But if they succeeded…
Oracle spoke again, pulling him from his thoughts. “I know that look. You worry too much.”
“Did you forget that we are going to face the Phoenix Force itself?” Gladiator said, his voice edged with frustration. “This is not like our other battles, Oracle. We are not facing warlords or rebels. We are facing a fundamental force of the universe, one that existed before the first stars ignited.”
Oracle placed a hand on his armored shoulder. “And we are the Imperial Guard. We were made to fight this cosmic force.”
He turned and saw his teammates, and he smiled.
Oracle was right. They were the Imperial Guard.
Warstar, Electron, Neutron, Starbolt, Titan, Hussar, Manta, Nightside, Flashfire together they made a formidable team.
Warstar or rather B’nee and C’cil were a symbiotic duo. B’nee, the small organic being, controlled the large robotic form named C’cil, and together they were a terror in combat. C’cil’s strength was nearly limitless, and B’nee’s tactical mind made them unpredictable.
Electron could generate and control electricity, sending cascading bolts that could fry systems or paralyze enemies. Neutron could control his own density and mass, becoming immovably heavy.
Starbolt could absorb and project energy solar and stellar which made him critical for this mission. If the Phoenix was fire incarnate, then having someone who could channel stellar energy might give them an edge.
Titan could grow to enormous size, a living mountain able to grapple even cosmic threats. Hussar wielded a neuronic whip and was an excellent tactician—better than he was in pure strategy.
Manta used force fields to terrifying effect not just for defense but as weapons, crushing and cutting with invisible barriers.
Nightside controlled the Darkforce dimension; she could create absolute darkness and trap enemies within that same dimension.
Flashfire generated and controlled plasma and fire, creating firestorms and superheated attacks and he was immune to heat. Another perfect fit for the battle ahead.
Gladiator felt his confidence growing and with it, his power. His abilities were tied to his self-assurance: the more certain he was of victory, the stronger he became. He could not stumble now. Could not doubt.
“If we had the Prince of Asgard and the Green Lantern with us, our victory would be guaranteed,” Gladiator said, half to himself.
Oracle nodded. “Yes. Too bad they left the empire.”
Gladiator’s expression turned wistful. The Green Lantern and the Prince of Asgard were two of the noblest heroes he had met. In their short time within the empire, they had saved planets from invasion and become war heroes during the Va’rrun Crisis.
He had planned to invite them to join the Guard permanently, but they had left soon after the Va’rrun Crisis never to be seen again. He often wondered where they were now, and what battles they fought among the stars.
“Boss, are we there yet?” Flashfire called out. “Can’t wait to get my hands on the Phoenix!”
Nightside’s voice came from a patch of shadow that shouldn’t exist on the well-lit ship. “And here I thought you couldn’t get more dimwitted.”
“Dimwitted?” Flashfire turned, mock-offended. “I have a plan, you see! I’m gonna burn the bird before it burns us!”
“That’s not a plan that is stupidity on a scale I have never seen before,” Electron said with a laugh, sparks dancing between his fingers.
“You’re just jealous of what’s about to happen Flashfire singlehandedly defeats the Phoenix. I can see the extranet articles already,” Flashfire shot back.
Manta spoke, her voice dry. “If you faint again like last time, I’m not catching you.”
“That was one time!” Flashfire protested.
“It was three times,” Neutron rumbled, his voice deep and slow. “In the same battle.”
“Details!” Flashfire waved dismissively.
Starbolt shook his head, grinning. “Leave defeating the Phoenix to me, young one.”
“Show-off,” Flashfire muttered.
Hussar’s whip crackled with energy. “Children, focus. We’re about to face a cosmic entity, not attend a comedy performance.”
“Why not both?” Nightside’s voice came from a different shadow now. “I find humor helps before potentially dying horribly.”
“Optimistic as always,” Titan said, his massive form somehow managing to look amused.
Warstar’s dual voices spoke in harmony B’nee’s small voice and C’cil’s mechanical rumble. “Combat calculations complete. Probability of humorous death: high.”
That actually got a laugh from several of them.
Gladiator watched with a smile. Good. They were in good spirits. They needed this. They were a family forged in countless battles. And together, they would face the Phoenix.
“Approaching target coordinates,” Oracle announced, her expression turning serious again.
The banter died as everyone turned toward the large screen on the bridge of the warship.
Gladiator watched as a planet with violet fauna and red oceans appeared on-screen. They had finished jumping into the system, the stars settling back into their normal positions as the jump drive disengaged.
“You know, I expected a lot of burning and destruction,” Titan said, his massive form leaning forward to study the peaceful world below.
The others murmured in confusion. Where were the scorched worlds? The trailing debris fields? The cosmic flames?
“Where is the Phoenix Force?” Gladiator asked sharply. “Has she left? Were we wrong about where she is?”
Oracle’s eyes glowed brilliant white as she used her psychic abilities, reaching out across the void to sense what their instruments could not. “The Phoenix is on the planet.” She paused, her glowing eyes widening.
“What is it?” Gladiator demanded, seeing her reaction.
Oracle’s voice was uncertain, confused. “I also feel the same signature as the Green Lantern.”
Gladiator looked at her sharply. “Is he battling the Phoenix?” If a hero like the Green Lantern was there, it made sense the system was still not destroyed; he could be holding the cosmic being at bay.
Oracle shook her head slowly, as if not believing what she sensed. She gave commands to send out stealth drones to a specific location, her fingers dancing over the holographic interface.
They watched as the drone footage came on-screen multiple views as the small reconnaissance units entered the atmosphere and flew toward where Oracle had detected both the Green Lantern’s and the Phoenix’s signatures.
The drones descended through violet clouds, past strange crystalline trees, over crimson rivers.
Then the footage appeared before them, and they all gasped in surprise.
The Green Lantern and what looked like the host of the Phoenix were flying together conversing and laughing. The woman, wreathed in cosmic flames, smiled at something the Lantern said, and he gestured animatedly as if telling a story.
“The betrayer!” Hussar said angrily, her whip crackling with barely restrained fury. “He has thrown his lot in with the Phoenix! She has seduced him to her side!”
Gladiator could not believe it. Why would the honorable Green Lantern do this? Were the years he spent in the empire all a ruse? Was he working with the Phoenix all along? Had everything—the heroism, the friendship they had formed—been a lie?
“Praetor,” Oracle said carefully, “I believe Hussar is correct. The Green Lantern is with the Phoenix. They have joined forces.”
Gladiator’s jaw tightened. “Yes. I believe so.” He took a breath, his mind already working through tactical scenarios. “We will need to deal with him before we capture the Phoenix.”
“Capture?” many on the team said, surprised.
Oracle, too, looked at him with great surprise, her glowing eyes fixed on his face.
“Yes. Capture,” Gladiator said firmly. “I believe we can do it. This could be our only chance the host appears relaxed, unprepared. If we succeed, the empire will never need to suffer from the Phoenix again. We end this threat permanently.”
“But the Lantern,” Oracle said, concern in her voice. “We did not account for him in our planning. His power is… considerable. And if he’s allied with the Phoenix…”
“Leave him to me,” Gladiator said, his confidence surging, his power growing with it. “I will handle the Green Lantern personally.”
He turned to face his team, his voice carrying the authority of the Praetor of the Imperial Guard. “Listen well to my plan for the capture. Everything has to go perfectly.
“Oracle, you will create a psychic-dampening field to prevent the Phoenix from sensing our approach. Nightside, you will trap the host in the Darkforce Dimension the moment Oracle gives the signal. Manta, your force fields will contain her once she’s isolated. Starbolt, Flashfire, Electron you will provide covering fire and distraction. Warstar, Neutron, Titan you form the physical containment perimeter. Hussar coordinates timing.”
He explained, in detail, when and how to deploy their powers and when Oracle was to unleash her full psychic might on the Phoenix.
He paused, meeting each of their eyes. “The Green Lantern cannot interfere. I will engage him the moment we strike and keep him occupied. In that time, you must secure the Phoenix. Understood?”
They all nodded, though several looked uncertain.
“For the empire,” Gladiator said.
“For the empire,” they echoed.
.
.
Next part tomorrow.
June Soriano
2025-10-21 22:06:49 +0000 UTCIllusiveone
2025-10-21 12:02:19 +0000 UTCXgodlikestevenx 531
2025-10-21 11:55:30 +0000 UTC