Minus
Nion
The cup was warm. Warm against her palms. Warm against her skin. Warm in a way that settled, in a way that stayed. She inhaled. Slow. Deep. The scent curled into her lungs, thick and sweet, rich with something almost indulgent.
French Vanilla. The name felt foreign, felt distant, felt misplaced. Yet the taste – the taste was here. The taste was real. She took a sip. Smooth. Creamy. Velvety. It melted on her tongue, seeped into her senses, settled in her chest. Soft, but deep. Gentle, but sharp. Simple, but not.
She swallowed, and her mind sharpened. Not just a drink. Not just a flavor. A creation. A refinement. A deliberate effort to make something better. Something structured. Something designed. Something that worked.
She had tried to recreate it.
Measured the ratios. Adjusted the heat. Tweaked the ingredients. And yet, it was never quite right. She took another sip. The hum of the medical office buzzed softly around her. The scent of disinfectants, the quiet whir of machines.
Here she was, drinking warmth. Drinking sweetness. Drinking something that shouldn't exist in this place, in this world, in this life.
Because The Emerald One had made it. The drink was available everywhere now – sold in the markets, popular among the Engineer Working Class, a staple in the new Emerald Capital. Accessible. Common. Replicated.
But this – this was hers. Brewed by the hands she admired. Crafted with deliberate care. Given to her, just her, in the quiet of this moment. She took a sip. It melted on her tongue, seeped into her senses, settled in her chest. Soft, but deep. Gentle, but sharp. Simple, but not.
She remembered the words.
"A drink should do more than taste good. It should serve a function. Improve the mood. Improve the body."
That was what The Emerald One had said. So she had experimented. She used kafa bean extract – strong, bold, just enough to sharpen focus. She balanced it with Aurelin honey, a rare sweetness that didn't spike energy but sustained it. She infused it with amberroot essence, known to stabilize adrenaline, to smooth out the erratic edges of exhaustion.
And then, there was the final touch – starflower dust. A subtle compound. Nothing overpowering. Just enough to lift the mood, to settle the mind, to make everything feel just a little bit… better. That was the brilliance of it. A drink engineered for the working class. For function, for efficiency, for productivity.
However, this one was different. Brewed by the woman she revered. Handed to her with a simple, knowing smile.
Knock
The knock came hard – too forceful, too rough, too unmeasured.
A pause.
Too long, too hesitant, too unsure.
Nion exhaled through her nose, fingers tightening around the porcelain cup. Warmth against skin, warmth against bone, warmth against thought. She set it down, the soft clink lost beneath the hum of machines embedded in the walls.
"Go in."
The door slid open before she could answer.
A woman stepped inside.
She moved like a puppet with tangled strings – stiff, awkward, unnatural. Her bodysuit clung to her form, regulation-perfect, but her posture betrayed her.
Too rigid. Too forced. Too rehearsed. Her hands were clenched – too tight. Her shoulders locked – too stiff. Her breath held – too long. Her tail twitched first. A flick, a lash, a snap.
A crack in the act. Nion's gaze swept over her. She said nothing.
The woman swallowed. Shifted. Tried to plant her feet, but her weight wavered between them. Unsteady. Unsure. Undone. Outside, the city pulsed. Towering billboards glowed. Towering billboards watched. Towering billboards dictated.
Women stood tall – poised, polished, perfected. A new standard. A new expectation. A new trend among women. One Nion had once been forced to embody herself – her own image, stretched across the skyline, frozen in light. This woman might had seen them. Had studied them. Had tried – and failed – to become them.
Nion leaned back, arms folding. Waiting. Watching. Weighing. The woman's throat bobbed. A breath hitched.
"Just speak."
She hesitated. Too long, too awkward, too obvious.
Her fingers twitched at her sides, gripping something small, something creased at the edges
. A card.
Nion gestured to the seat across from her. She obeyed – too fast, too stiff, too unnatural. The chair scraped against the floor. She winced. For a moment, silence settled between them. The hum of machines. The faint aroma of vanilla. The muted noise of the city beyond the walls.
Then, at last, Lora moved. She lifted the card with both hands, like it was something precious, something fragile, something more important than it was. She set it down. Nion looked at it.
IMPERIUM VIRIDION PRIME
Official Citizenship & Clearance Card
LORA AN
Under-Eminence of Order | Cleaning Division | 1-Star
Citizenship Tier: Bronze
Sector Assignment: Sapphire District
Clearance: Civil Operations Only
ID Code: AE-OR-CL-01473
Report lost or missing cards to the Administrative Office of Order Eminence.
Nion's eyes flicked up. Lora swallowed. Once. Twice. Again.
"Cleaning department?"
Lora nodded – too eager, too quick, too desperate.
"You're afraid of me."
Lora flinched. Nion exhaled through her nose, fingers tapping once against the table.
"Relax. You're not in trouble."
Lora didn't look convinced. She studied the woman – Lora An – her posture stiff, her breathing shallow, her fingers gripping the edges of her seat as if she might bolt at any moment. Reluctance thickened the air, hesitation settling between them like an unspoken barrier. Yet the words still came.
"Director Nion… I saw in the advertisements… if you're an official citizen… you qualify for the Emerald Mother Benefits if… pregnant."
If pregnant.
Pregnant.
Nion blinked. The statement shouldn't have surprised her, yet it did. She knew this program well – knew its structure, knew its purpose, knew its intent. Out of all the reforms, this one had been the most delicate. The most controversial. The most important.
For generations, Saiyan women had been warriors first, vessels second. They bore children, but they did not raise them. They birthed them, but they did not nurture them. Infants were measured in strength before they could even open their eyes, their worth determined before they took their first breath. If deemed weak, they were discarded. If deemed strong, they were sent away.
No bonds. No attachments. No future beyond survival.
But now?
Now, the Emerald Mother Program changed everything. Now, pregnancy meant something. Now, motherhood was not a burden but a right. Now, women were given time. Given care. Given priority.
"The future must be handled with support and love."
Support and love. Support and love. Words that had never belonged in Saiyan culture. Words that had no place on the battlefield, no place in conquest, no place in the brutal cycle of war. And yet, the Emerald One had spoken them. Had declared them necessary. Had carved them into law.
Under the Emerald Mother Program, pregnant women were granted access to higher quality of living. Their health became a priority. Their well-being was safeguarded. Their children – no matter how strong or weak – were given food, shelter, and education.
A mother would not just bear a child. A mother would raise them. A mother would protect them. A mother would not be forced to choose between war and her own blood. Nion inhaled, her fingers tracing the rim of her cup. Lora An's hands trembled slightly.
"You're pregnant?"
A small nod. Barely visible. Barely a whisper. And just like that, something shifted. Something small. Something monumental. Something irreversible.
Nion's gaze locked onto the swell of her stomach. Rounded. Heavy. Pressing against the fabric like it was straining to be acknowledged. Seven months, maybe eight. Almost due. Almost there. Almost too late.
Her fingers twitched. A sharp breath in. A slow breath out. The irritation curled in her chest, tight, twisting, threatening to unravel.
"For how long?"
The words came clipped, sharper than she intended.
Lora An hesitated. Hands fidgeting. Eyes darting. Voice small.
"Seven months."
Seven months. Seven months. Seven months.
Nion's jaw clenched.
Seven months, and she only spoke now? Seven months, and only now did she step forward? Seven months, and she thought this was acceptable?
Exhale. Inhale. The irritation swelled, pressing, clawing, demanding release.
"Then why only now?"
Her voice didn't soften. It didn't need to. Lora flinched, her fingers curling into the fabric of her bodysuit.
"You know the Emerald One would be furious."
A pause. A heavy silence.
"She has a soft spot for babies."
A beat.
"For children."
Another beat.
"Everyone knows that."
Everyone. And yet, Lora had waited. Waited as the months passed. Waited as the child grew. Waited, waited, waited – until now.
Nion's fingers tapped against the desk, slow, deliberate, the rhythm steady, the irritation simmering beneath the surface.
"Why?"
Lora flinched.
"I… I thought if I signed up, I'd lose my job," she murmured, voice small, uncertain. "That I'd be forced to stay home. That I'd have to give up the merit points. Everything."
Nion's irritation spiked, sharp and immediate. She forced it down. Forced herself to breathe.
"And?" Her voice came clipped, expectant.
Lora swallowed. "I didn't want to be… useless."
"Useless?"
The word echoed. Hung in the air. Stretched between them.
"You think raising the next generation is useless?"
A pause.
"You think keeping a child alive, shaping them, making them something than you ever were, is useless?"
Another pause.
"You think the Emerald One designed this system – built this empire from nothing – so we could weaken ourselves?"
Lora's lips parted, but no sound came out.
"What happens to a Saiyan raised without care?"
Nion's fingers tapped against the desk. Once. Twice. A steady, rhythmic beat.
"What happens to a child thrown into the wild like an afterthought?" Tap.
"What happens when we treat our own blood as tools for war, nothing else?" Tap.
Reckless. Tap. Stupid. Tap. Weak. Tap.
"The Emerald One isn't taking away your purpose. She's giving you one."
Her voice dropped lower, steady as stone.
"Paid leave. Training programs. Education. Resources."
She listed them off like a battle plan. A strategy. A foundation.
"Everything you need to come back stronger. Everything you need to raise a child who won't just survive – but thrive."
The silence stretched.
"A Saiyan mother isn't just a caretaker."
A pause. A beat.
"She's the first teacher."
A breath.
"The first commander."
A steady gaze.
"The first battle a child has to overcome."
The room felt smaller. Tighter. Heavier.
Nion exhaled, slow and measured.
"So tell me again."
Her fingers stilled.
"Do you still think you'd be useless?"
Lora gripped the fabric of her bodysuit, her fingers twisting the material. Her breath hitched, but she forced herself to speak.
"It's not that I think raising a child is useless," She murmured. "It's just – " she hesitated, then exhaled sharply. "Nobody respects someone without a job."
She looked up, meeting Nion's eyes with something raw. Something honest. "In the Empire, if you don't work, you're nothing. If you don't contribute, you're dead weight."
A breath. A pause. A truth too heavy to swallow all at once.
"Everyone says the Emerald One changed everything, that she gave us purpose, gave us value. But that means if you don't have a role – " she swallowed, the words like sand in her throat. "You don't have worth."
She bit her lip.
"I know the program provides everything. Food. Shelter. Education. But if I stop working, if I stop being useful – " her grip tightened, knuckles paling. "
What am I then?"
The words lingered. Hung in the air like smoke.
The tension in her shoulders was unmistakable, the hesitation in her eyes even more so. She was afraid – not of Nion, not of the Emerald One, but of what signing that document meant.
"You think this is just about survival?"
Lora shifted, hesitating. "Isn't it?" she asked, her voice small, uncertain.
Nion shook her head.
"The Emerald One understands something most Saiyans never will," She said. "A person without love, without care – someone only seen for their strength, their combat power – they aren't a person at all. They're just a weapon."
Lora flinched.
"And what happens to weapons, Lora?" Nion continued. "They get used. They get wielded by others. They get discarded when they're no longer useful. Is that what you want? To be another discarded blade, rusting in a pile of forgotten things?"
Lora swallowed hard, her grip tightening around her own fingers. Nion let the silence stretch before continuing.
"You think this program is about making you weak?" Her fingers curled against the desk. "You think taking care of your child, giving them a life where they are more than just a fighter, is weakness?"
Lora's lips parted slightly, but no words came out.
"Do you know why she
created this program?" Nion asked. "Because she lived it. The Emerald One grew up knowing exactly what it meant to be nothing but a tool. She was born in a place where power was the only thing that mattered. Her own father starved her, forced her to fight, to work tirelessly just to stay alive. And no one cared. No one ever looked at her and saw anything but a future tool."
Lora blinked, stunned.
"You think those are just rumors?" Nion scoffed. "I saw the Emerald One tear down everything that made her that way. She swore no child under her empire would be left to rot, abandoned to die just because they weren't useful enough. No woman under her rule would ever have to choose between survival and motherhood."
She let the words sink in before speaking again.
"And you, Lora." Nion's voice softened, but there was something piercing underneath, something undeniable. "Given your combat power, given your strength – did she hesitate to take you in? To make you part of this empire?"
Lora's breath hitched.
"No," she whispered.
Nion nodded.
"Because she saw something more in you."
Lora looked down at her stomach, fingers hovering just above it.
"She wants you to see it too."
Nion leaned back in her chair, exhaling slowly as she studied Lora's face. The woman was still tense, still processing, but Nion could see the shift – the hesitation cracking, giving way to something else. Something deeper.
"I will extend my understanding to you," Nion said. "You're not the first to hesitate. You won't be the last. But this is bigger than you, Lora. Bigger than me. Bigger than any one person."
Lora swallowed, nodding faintly.
"I want you to talk to the other women," Nion continued. "Tell them what you were afraid of. Tell them why you hesitated. Tell them why that hesitation was a mistake."
Lora's hands curled into loose fists.
"We have to be transparent," Nion pressed. "No more hiding. No more waiting until it's too late. No more fearing that asking for help means weakness." She leaned forward."The Emerald One designed this system so no woman would have to fight alone. So no mother would be forced to choose between survival and her child. But it only works if we trust it. If we trust each other."
Lora exhaled, long and slow.
"I understand…"
Nion held her gaze for a moment longer, then nodded.
"Then prove it. Show them that transparency isn't a weakness - it's a strength."
Lora hesitated, fingers tightening around the edge of her uniform. The weight of the conversation settled over her like a thick veil, pressing down on her reluctance, her fear of stepping into something unknown.
"And if I sign up now?" she asked, voice quieter, unsure. "What happens next?"
Nion didn't hesitate. "Then you receive full Emerald Mother benefits immediately. Housing upgrades, higher food rations, full medical care, and post-birth support. You will be assigned a maternity officer from the Eminence of Order to monitor your well-being. You will be given time – real time – to raise your child without worrying about survival."
Lora swallowed. "And my job?"
"Your position is secured. When you're ready to return, there will be a place for you. No demotions. No penalties. But while you are in the program, your only duty is to your child. To ensure they grow strong, not just in body, but in mind and heart."
Lora glanced at her lap, her expression unreadable. Then, after a long moment, she exhaled.
"Where do I sign?"
"Here. It's a declaration of commitment – your acceptance into the program. Once you sign, it is absolute."
Lora reached for the document, her fingers hovering over the paper. She hesitated – just for a second – before pressing her thumb down.
It was done.
Kashta
The Sapphire District was nothing like the wastelands. Nothing like the barren, lifeless stretch of dirt where he had been cast aside – filthy, starving, humiliated. Nothing like the place where the once-powerful warriors of the tribes now scrounged like rats, their strength wasted on nothing.
Here, people moved with so called purpose. Here, people walked without fear. Here, people lived.
It made him sick.
That Emerald Bitch had taken everything from him. His status. His servants. His right to rule. Back in Durga, he had been a young master, second only to the tribal chiefs – feared, respected. When he spoke, warriors listened. When he raised his hand, servants cowered. But now? Now there was nothing.
No one to serve him. No one to cook for him. No one to kneel at his feet. No one to suffer when he was angry.
She took them all. Took them from their tribes, took them from their place, took them from him. Dragged them into her so-called Empire. Left the real Saiyans to rot.
Kashta had seen it firsthand. First, she killed the chiefs. Killed them without hesitation, without ceremony, without even a fight. Then, she took the working class. Took the cooks, the builders, the smiths, the laborers. The warriors sneered at first.
Laughed. Thought they'd adapt. Thought they'd hunt more, take more, survive.
But there was no food. No proper animals left. No servants to cook. No one to serve. No one to obey.
The hunting grounds that had fed them for generations? Restricted zones. The plantations where they once took their fill? Guarded. The beasts that roamed the wastelands? Tough. Bitter. Inedible. Some tried to fight back. Of course they did. They were Saiyans. They were warriors. They were conquerors.
They were obliterated. Not by her. Not even by her generals.
By her fucking system.
A system where the workers no longer needed to kneel. A system where no one needed to serve. A system where the weak were not weak because they had opportunity. She took everything from them. Took the foundation of their power, took the very place that made them Saiyans. And then she rebuilt it.
Kashta refused to accept it. He refused to bow. He refused to kneel.
He refused to let that Emerald Whore think she had won.
No matter how many of them died. No matter how deep they were forced into the dirt. No matter how much the world had changed. He would not back down.
Kashta ground his teeth as the laughter rang in his ears, grating, mocking, taunting.
"Shit, this broth is insane!" one of them groaned, practically melting into his seat. "I swear, I could drink this for the rest of my damn life!"
"You think this is good? You should've tried the Black Pepper Beef Ramen last week," another said, slurping obnoxiously. "Had me throwing punches in the air like I was about to ascend!"
"Yeah? Well, I got the Spicy Hellfire Special today. Almost knocked me out of my seat! If I get any stronger off this, I might just sign up for the next tournament."
"You? Stronger?" The first one cackled. "Keep dreaming, pal. You barely won your last match!"
"That's 'cause I was running on empty! But now? With this?" He lifted his bowl dramatically. "I feel it, man! I feel the power flowing through me!"
Laughter erupted around the stall. Carefree. Loud. Unrestrained.
Kashta's fingers dug into his palms.
Power?
These vermin – these worker-class nobodies – had the audacity to talk about power over a fucking bowl of soup?! He felt something in his jaw crack from how hard he was clenching.
Then another voice chimed in, almost sending him over the edge.
"You know, if you sign up for the new Labor Operation, you get half off at all the food stalls?"
"No way. You serious?"
"Dead serious! The Emerald One's orders. Full bellies, full strength, better performance. That's the motto!"
"Fuck me, that's genius! Why didn't we do this sooner?"
Kashta's vision blurred red. His world had burned. His entire life had been ripped apart. And these fucking insects were singing praises for her? For her system? For her empire?
His stomach twisted. His fists trembled. His entire body screamed at him to move. To act. To tear them apart.
A firm tap on his shoulder. A voice, casual but expectant.
"Oi. Why aren't you in uniform?"
Kashta's breath caught. His fingers curled under his cloak, digging into his palms. He didn't turn. Didn't move.
The voice didn't go away.
"You new or something?" A scoff. "That'd be the only reason you're walking around like this."
Kashta stayed silent.
A sigh. "Fine. I'll explain it so you don't get yourself executed or worse."
Executed? His stomach twisted. He forced himself to stay still.
"You see," the man continued."this is Imperium Viridion Prime. Not some wasteland where you can do whatever the fuck you want. If you're a citizen, you wear the bodysuit. If you're an outsider? It's goodluck on you."
Kashta's fingers twitched. Processed?
The man clapped him on the back. Too familiar. Too fucking casual.
"They'll drag you to an outpost, check your records, and if you belong here, congrats – you get your uniform and a fine. If not?" A laugh, cruel and knowing. "Well it depends."
Kashta's jaw clenched.
"Not gonna lie, though," the man went on, "most guys who show up like you don't come back. Either they're criminals, exiles, or just stupid. And the Imperium? Doesn't like wasting resources on the them."
The words crawled under Kashta's skin like fire ants.
Useless.
Exile.
A fine? He had nothing. He was already starving, already on the verge of collapse, and now this fucking bastard was acting like he was some ignorant fool? His stomach clenched again, hunger gnawing at his insides. The scent of food drifted past – hot broth, sizzling meat, thick noodles. Laughter from the ramen stall.
Saiyans – low-class trash – were eating. Talking about martial duels. Mocking him with their happiness. And this bastard behind him – this pawn of the Emerald One – was explaining his own demise like it was nothing.
Kashta gritted his teeth.
"Wait a second," he murmured. "Kashta? Kashta of Durga?"
Kashta stiffened. The air between them changed. The casual amusement drained from the man's voice, replaced by something else. Something colder.
Kashta turned.
Kashta's breath hitched.
He knew this man. Not just knew – remembered.
Vividly.
His favorite punching bag. A scrawny, rat-faced weakling. Small. Thin. Short. The kind of Saiyan who barely deserved the air he breathed. The kind who flinched when spoken to, who cringed under a glare, who folded at the slightest threat.
Kashta had made it a sport to break him. A slap here. A kick there. A fist to the gut when he felt particularly pissed. Just to remind him. Just to put him in his place.
But now?
Now, the weakling stood a head taller than him. Now, the thin frame had filled out – lean, solid muscle stretching against that fucking bodysuit, black and green, stitched with two and a half stars. Now, he didn't flinch. Didn't cringe. Didn't bow his head.
He just stared.
And something about that – the lack of fear, the quiet, unmoving weight of his gaze – made Kashta's blood pound in his skull.
A sick, twisting heat churned in his gut. No. No, this wasn't right. This worm – this thing he had beaten into the dirt – was standing over him? Looking him in the eye like they were equals?
Unacceptable.
Kashta forced a grin, sharp and mean. "Well, well," he drawled, voice curling with venom. "Looks like someone finally learned how to eat."
The man said nothing.
Kashta's grin widened, a sneer curling at the edges. "What, did the Emerald Bitch fatten you up? Hand-feed you scraps like a good little mutt?" His eyes flicked over the bodysuit, the stars, the stance that held no fear. "Tell me, did it feel good? Wagging your tail for her?"
Still, the man didn't react. Didn't lunge. Didn't snarl. Didn't break. And that – that infuriating, unshaken silence – felt like a slap in Kashta's face.
The man laughed.
A deep, full-bodied laugh. The kind that didn't just come from amusement – but from pity.
Kashta's stomach twisted.
"You're lucky, you know that?" The man wiped a tear from his eye, shaking his head. "Kashta of the Durga Tribe. The Kashta of Durga."
Kashta's jaw clenched. The way he said it – like a joke, like a relic of something pathetic – made his skin crawl.
"You don't even know, do you?" The man's smirk widened. "You're on the list."
Kashta stiffened. "What list?"
The man leaned in, voice low and almost gentle. "The ones with extreme merit points upon capture."
Kashta felt his blood run cold.
"You," the man continued, expression unreadable, "are worth a lot."
The words landed like a gut punch.
Kashta swallowed. His mind raced.
Merit points? Capture? He didn't understand – no, no, he did understand, but he refused to accept it.
"You have no idea how much trouble you're in, man."
Kashta's ki flared violently, scorching the air around him. His body screamed for food, for strength, but his pride screamed louder.
He lunged. A straight shot, all power, no hesitation. His fist cut through the air like a meteor, aimed right at that smug, calm face.
The man didn't move. Didn't brace. Didn't blink. Didn't even acknowledge the blow.
Kashta snarled – you fucking dare?! – and threw his other fist, faster this time. The man shifted a single step to the side, just enough for Kashta's strike to graze past his cheek.
That fucking calm.
"Is that all?"
His voice wasn't mocking. It was worse than that. It was genuine.
Kashta's rage boiled over. His aura exploded outward. He spun on his heel and came down with an axe kick, aiming to cave the bastard's skull in. But before the impact – before he could even register what happened – his foot never landed.
A sharp jerk – his balance ripped out from under him – his own body twisted – And suddenly, he was on the ground.
Face pressed into the dirt. Arm wrenched behind his back, locked in a brutal vice.
The fuck?!
Kashta thrashed, his bones straining, his ki flaring hotter –
But the grip only tightened.
When did he grab me? How did he – ?!
"Predictable,"
His voice – calm. Unbothered. Kashta growled, trying to force his way up, but then – pressure. A shift of weight. The man's legs wrapped around his neck, locking in a chokehold.
His breath vanished.
"No – no, no, you piece of – !"
He clawed at the arm around his throat, his vision swimming, his lungs screaming. This wasn't how this was supposed to go. Not against him. Not against this fucking runt. The bastard didn't even speak now. Just let the hold sink deeper.
Kashta's strength meant nothing. His body refused to move. His thoughts turned sluggish, spiraling into black. And the last thing he heard – before his world snapped into darkness – Was the steady, even sound of the man's breathing.