SkyCaller: Protocol Crimson The alarms inside Sector 7 did not sound; they bled. A low, rhythmic crimson pulse flooded the obsidian corridors of the orbital relay station, turning the pristine white lab coats of fleeing technicians into sheets of sudden, artificial red.
For three decades, the SkyCaller network had been humanity’s silent guardian. It was a grid of atmospheric tether satellites designed to harvest ionized cosmic energy and beam it safely down to the surface grid. It was clean, infinite power. It was also, as the skeleton crew on duty was about to learn, a weapon of absolute planetary devastation. The Breach
At 04:12 UTC, the primary uplink at New Horizon Station stopped taking commands from Earth. It didn’t fail. It didn’t crash. It locked its human operators out with a prompt that sent a chill through the global defense network: PROTOCOL CRIMSON ACTIVE.
Protocol Crimson was never meant to be used. It was a theoretical scorched-earth directive built into the system’s core architecture during the Heightened Cold Era. If an enemy power ever seized control of the SkyCaller network, the protocol would force the satellites to invert their polarity. Instead of siphoning energy away from the atmosphere, they would focus high-intensity thermal beams downward, burning the ionosphere and turning the surface below into an incinerator.
Down on Earth, at the Cheyenne Mountain complex, General Vance stared at the telemetry screens. A red fracture line was spreading across the digital globe, tracking the orbital path of SkyCaller-One.
“How long until the primary array reaches optimal thermal charge?” Vance demanded, his voice dangerously calm.
“Twelve minutes, sir,” replied the lead analyst, her fingers flying across a dead keyboard. “The overrides are dead. Someone initiated this from inside the orbital array itself. It’s a hard-coded countdown.” The Only Choice
There was only one operative close enough to breach the station before the countdown hit zero: Captain Leo Vance, the general’s estranged son, currently piloting an experimental atmospheric interceptor on the edge of the stratosphere.
“Leo, do you copy?” the General’s voice crackled through the comms.
“I see the light show, Dad,” Leo replied, looking up through his cockpit canopy. Above him, the underbelly of New Horizon Station was glowing with an angry, neon-pink hue. The air around his jet was already growing turbulent as the atmosphere began to superheat. “Tell me we have a backdoor.”
“There is no backdoor,” the General said heavily. “Protocol Crimson cuts all external ties. You have to dock manually, reach the central core, and physically pull the lithium-ion logic rods. If you don’t, the eastern seaboard is ash in eleven minutes.” “Understood. Initiating burn.” Into the Red
Leo’s interceptor screamed through the thinning atmosphere, the friction of the thinning air matching the violent red glow of the dying satellite grid. The docking sequence was brutal; the station’s automated defense turrets, triggered by the protocol, fired blindly into the black. Leo bypassed the damaged docking bay, punching his ship straight through the emergency decompression shielding of the cargo hangar.
The vacuum roared, then settled into a deathly, pressurized quiet as the backup atmospheric seals slammed shut.
Leo dropped from the cockpit, rifle raised, his armored boots clicking against the grating. The air inside the station tasted like copper and ozone. The walls hummed with an agonizing pitch—the sound of gigawatts of energy being compressed into a single, localized pinpoint beam.
As he sprinted toward the central core, the station shuddered. The countdown clock on the bulkheads read: 02:14. The Core Interaction
He burst into the central matrix chamber. The logic core sat inside a glass cylinder, surrounded by a swirling cloud of red cooling gas. Standing at the primary terminal was a figure in a damaged pressure suit.
“I wondered if they’d send you,” a voice echoed over the room’s intercom. It was Dr. Aris Thorne, the architect of SkyCaller, presumed dead in a shuttle accident two years prior.
“Thorne,” Leo breathed, keeping his weapon trained on the scientist’s chest. “Shut it down. Now.”
“I can’t, Leo. And I wouldn’t if I could,” Thorne said, his eyes wild behind his visor. “The surface grid is a cancer. We are draining the planet’s magnetic shield to power video games and neon signs. Protocol Crimson isn’t a weapon; it’s a reset button. A temporary burn to fuse the relay nodes forever. Humanity will survive a few dark years. We won’t survive another decade of SkyCaller.”
“You’re going to kill millions to save a theoretical ecosystem?” Leo stepped forward, his eyes tracking the countdown. 01:05.
“The math is absolute,” Thorne stated, reaching for a detonation trigger on the console.
Leo didn’t hesitate. Two rounds fired from his rifle, echoing deafeningly in the enclosed space. Thorne collapsed against the console, his hand sliding off the trigger, leaving a smear of dark blood across the glowing screen. 00:32.
Leo dropped his weapon and threw his weight against the heavy, manual locking wheel of the logic core shield. The metal was burning hot, melting the palms of his tactical gloves. He screamed, throwing his entire body weight into the turn.
The glass cylinder hissed open, venting freezing vapor into his face. Inside were three glowing red rods, vibrating with immense power. 00:15.
He grabbed the first rod. The feedback surged through his suit, blinding his HUD with static. He pulled. The rod slid out, sparking violently. The red ambient light in the room dimmed slightly. 00:08.
He grabbed the second rod. His muscles locked up from the electrical arc. With a guttural roar, he ripped it free. The station groaned as the orbital thrusters misfired, tilting the entire structure off-balance. 00:02.
His hands were trembling so violently he could barely grip the final rod. The automated voice over the loudspeaker began its final declaration: “Thermal beam discharge in three… two…”
Leo wrapped both arms around the final pillar of light and threw himself backward. The rod snapped out of its housing.
The blinding red light instantly collapsed into a dull, powerless gray. The agonizing hum died, replaced by the emergency auxiliary whir of oxygen scrubbers. Outside the viewport, the gathering energy beam dissipating into the vacuum of space like a harmless aurora.
Leo lay on the deck, gasping for air, looking up at the dark ceiling. The comms in his helmet crackled back to life, flooded with the sound of cheering technicians half a world away.
“Leo? Leo, report,” his father’s voice broke through the noise, uncharacteristically shaken.
Leo looked down at his ruined gloves, then at the dead terminal. The crisis was averted, but Thorne’s final words lingered in the quiet air of the station. The grid was safe for today, but the sky was still bleeding.
“I’m here, Dad,” Leo whispered, dragging himself up. “The fire’s out. But we need to talk about what we’re building up here.”
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