Then he added, so softly only the stars could hear:
“All sectors report compliance, sir,” said Ensign Vell, though her voice trembled. “Ground forces are securing the capital. Casualties… are catastrophic.”
“Conquest,” he whispered to himself, tasting the word like ash. “We wanted to conquer Earth.”
“Order the flag to half-mast,” he said quietly. Conquest Earth
On the screen below, a single image flickered—a drone feed from what remained of a city called Geneva. A child, no older than six, stood alone in a crater. She held a torn flag in one hand and a broken toy in the other. She wasn’t crying. She was staring directly up at the sky. At the Odyssey .
The silence after the bombardment was worse than the noise. Admiral Thorne stood on the bridge of the Odyssey , watching the blue-green marble below swirl with new, ugly bruises of grey and orange. The planetary defense grids were down. The最后一波 resistance had been extinguished twelve minutes ago.
Thorne didn’t flinch. He had memorized the brief: Three billion human lives lost in the first hour. Another two billion displaced. Ninety-seven percent of military assets vaporized. The numbers had lost their meaning somewhere between the fall of the Atlantic Wall and the surrender of the Pacific Fleet. Then he added, so softly only the stars
He turned from the viewport. His face was carved from the same stone as the war memorials back on Mars. “Did we?”
He sat down in the command chair, suddenly feeling every one of his fifty years.
Thorne had seen alien armadas, supernovas, the death of stars. But that look—not fear, not surrender, but a quiet, burning promise—chilled him more than any weapon. “We wanted to conquer Earth
“Signal Fleet Command,” he said at last. “Tell them the planet is ours.”
“God help us for what comes next.”
Vell blinked. “Sir? We won.”