Elite: N.o.v.a. Near Orbit Vanguard Alliance

No alarms sound. No threats are detected. It is, by all measures, a quiet night in Near Orbit.

An earlier version of this article misspelled the Helsingard Compact. N.O.V.A. does not issue corrections. The author has been reminded that "in orbit, errors are permanent." n.o.v.a. near orbit vanguard alliance elite

By J. Chen, Defense Correspondent, Orbital Times No alarms sound

To the uninitiated, it is an acronym for the . To the pirates, rogue states, and would-be asteroid-mining warlords, it is simply "The Reaper’s Halo." Genesis: The Fall of the "Quiet Sky" The N.O.V.A. initiative wasn't born from ambition, but from catastrophe. In 2039, the "Quiet Sky" era ended when a non-state actor, the Helsingard Compact, deployed a cascade kinetic bombardment on the Singapore Arcology. The weapon was a decommissioned nickel-iron asteroid, nudged out of its lunar cycler orbit. An earlier version of this article misspelled the

— In the inky blackness 412 kilometers above the Indian Ocean, a silent sentinel watches. It is not a weapon, not in the traditional sense. It is a warship, a data-fusion nexus, and a home. Its hull bears a single, stark emblem: a stylized orbital ring pierced by a vertical sword. Below it, the letters read N.O.V.A.

Their initiation rite, The Silent Vigil , requires candidates to spend 72 hours alone in a stripped-down EVA suit, tethered to a derelict fuel tank, with only a single emergency thruster. No communication. No tether to a mothership. The goal: to master the paralyzing terror of the void. Those who press the panic button are washed out. Those who don't emerge transformed—some say broken, but N.O.V.A. calls it "forged." Last month, N.O.V.A. proved its worth. A Helsingard remnant force attempted to hijack the Copernicus orbital refinery, intending to use its reaction control system as a crude kinetic weapon against the Brazilian coast. The Alliance Elite responded within 47 seconds of detection.

N.O.V.A.'s response is characteristically terse. Their public charter states simply: "In the void, there is no court. There is no appeal. There is only the integrity of the orbit. We are that integrity." As of 2026, N.O.V.A. is expanding. The new Xylos-class Vanguard Carriers —each a kilometer-long, modular command ship—are entering service. They carry the next generation of "Razor" drones, which blur the line between AI and remote pilot. More controversially, leaked documents suggest Project Eternal Vigil: a plan to deploy permanent, weaponized platforms at every Lagrange Point in the Earth-Moon system, effectively creating a "cage" around human spaceflight.