Rosehill Solutions was never meant to be memorable.
It began as something simple. Logistics. Repairs. Cleanups. A place to “solve problems” for capsuleers who didn’t ask too many questions.
But somewhere in the early contracts, something started answering back.
The first anomaly was a shipment marked medical supplies that arrived as empty crates… yet every station that opened them reported feeling “lighter.” As if something had been removed that they couldn’t name.
Then came the tissue box incident.
A harmless object. Standard issue. Until fleets started seeing it in cargo holds that never contained it… and stations began logging it in places it was never delivered to.
Rosehill called it a glitch.
Neptune Torres called it home.
Now Neptune exists as something between contractor and consequence — a ghost-layer in the Rosehill network. Not always present, not always absent. Just… reflected.
When systems destabilise, when fleets vanish from overview for a heartbeat, when local chat goes quiet for too long…
Rosehill Solutions doesn’t deploy response teams anymore.
They wait for the echo to finish moving through the gates.
Because every incident report ends the same way:
“Subject: Neptune Torres Status: Not present. Not absent. Outcome: Already resolved.”
And somewhere in the static between systems… a tissue box opens by itself.
A Sledge > People who support CODE, or skip the tutorial makes my bunny cry.