The Spike Protocol

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The spike snapped at 0600 hours, exactly when the Kethari assault began. Captain Marcus Hale saw it happen from his command position—a titanium-alloy structural spike, designed to hold the defensive wall together under stress, shearing in half like it had been made of glass.

The wall didn't fall. It crumbled.

And through the crumbling went the Kethari, three hundred of them in the first wave, moving like liquid shadow across the broken earth of Position Theta-7.

"Hold the line!" Marcus shouted into his comms, though he knew it was pointless. The spike failure had created a twelve-meter gap in the defensive wall, and the Kethari were pouring through it like water through a ruptured hull.

What followed was forty-seven minutes of the kind of combat that Marcus had been training for since he was sixteen years old. Close-quarters fighting in mud and acid rain, with plasma rifles and kinetic weapons and the kind of raw, desperate violence that made war feel less like strategy and more like anatomy.

When it was over, the Kethari were gone. Position Theta-7 was intact, barely. And twelve of Marcus's soldiers were dead.

The official report would say: "Position Theta-7 held despite catastrophic structural failure of the primary defensive spike installation. Casualties were sustained but within acceptable parameters."

Marcus would not sign that report.

He spent the afternoon sorting through the debris of the broken wall. The spikes were not just broken—they had been compromised. He picked up one of the断裂的spikes and examined the fracture point under his optical scanner. The metal was substandard. Not by much—maybe fifteen percent below military specification—but enough. Under the stress of a full-scale assault, a fifteen percent weakness was the difference between holding and breaking.

He found another spike. Same fracture pattern. Same substandard alloy. He found a third, a fourth, a fifth. Every single one of the spikes that had failed in the Theta-7 wall was made from the same batch of substandard material.

And he recognized the marking on the spike heads. Titan Engineering's quality assurance stamp. The company that supplied ninety percent of the Federation's structural materials.

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