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Ehmia — VESSELBORN Codex

Ehmia

Relayman

Population: Thazvaari

Origin: Teytan Outskirts, Inland Thazvaar

Age at Death: 35

Height: 6'1"

Weight: 176 lbs

Profession: Relayman (truth seeker)

Status: Dead

Method

Ehmia was a truth seeker who used corridors as entry points into the syndicates she intended to embed in. She traveled with contractor crews heading into contested territory, used the proximity and chaos of corridor operations to make contact with syndicate networks, and then embedded within them to extract intelligence from the inside. She was beautiful and she used that deliberately, leveraging her appearance to build access with men and women across every level of the organizations she infiltrated. When beauty was not enough she used other tools. She drugged people. She found information on targets before interacting with them and used it to coerce or blackmail them into cooperation. She killed men who would have exposed her. She destroyed families when the information she needed sat behind a relationship she had to dismantle to reach it. She stole schematics, credentials, operational details, and anything else that could be transmitted to the relay in ways that would help contractors survive. She embedded only with hardened crews who understood what she was doing and did not question how she did it.

Impact

The general public never knew what Ehmia did for the information she broadcast, and they do not know even after her death. What reached the relay was intelligence: syndicate positions, operational patterns, supply chain structures, and the kind of specific tactical data that contractors working in Energy Wars corridors used to make decisions that very possibly kept them alive. For the contractors who received that intelligence, she was deeply respected. They never judged her methods because the alternative to her methods was less information and more dead contractors, and nobody in a corridor has ever preferred the moral high ground to survival.

She paved the way for people like Txeiha, though Txeiha's version of leverage is tame by comparison. Ehmia did not threaten exposure. She drugged people, seduced them, blackmailed them, and killed the ones who threatened to end her work. Where Txeiha uses relationships to open doors, Ehmia broke the doors down and burned the building behind her to make sure nobody could follow her out.

Death

A cascade of exposures put her in sudden, extreme danger. The syndicate networks she had been operating within connected enough of her activities to understand that the intelligence reaching the relay was coming from inside their own operations, and the window between identification and response was very short. Her escaping airship was shot down over syndicate airspace. She was thirty-five years old.

VESSELBORN Codex — Ehmia

About Vesselborn

Vesselborn is the story of Geba — a world that has carried an empire for six thousand years.

It begins with Vaer’karesh, who unites five nations into the first empire and fixes a common language and law. Across the ages, the empire fights and finally breaks Thazvaar, welcomes Jeyrha through engineering and diplomacy, and liberates Berinu by choice. In Ngorrhal, the people of the mountain passes lose their ancestral name and are permanently renamed the Frost Sentinels, whose strength helps secure imperial rule. The Haavu cannon systems cement that dominance.

At its height, the empire spans continents and raises relay towers that bind cities, coasts, and passes into one network. Assassinations and civil wars follow — the Fracture — but the answer is not a vacuum. The Shadow Rule forms from imperial networks and manufactures peace, ending the warlord broadcasts and taking the world back from collapse. They are the empire made quiet: continuity without ceremony.

Today, the Shadow Rulers still govern from the background while the Energy Wars — covert struggles over power grids and relays in uncivilized regions — decide who controls energy, transport, and culture.

Stories range from relay-field defenses and inland recoveries to city governance and frontier resettlement; from rail lines and air programs that stitch regions together to festivals and work crews where culture and politics collide; from Frost Sentinel memory to families choosing the safety of hub clearings or the risk beyond the grid.

This is Geba.
It began in silence.
It has not yet ended.