Sulfur Lungs
"Don't you ever wonder?" Wirtram slurred the words through breaths so acidic and pungent they might have put a wookiee to sleep.
"Wonder what?" Ives asked, holding his nose regardless of if the older miner would get offended.
"If you'd walked through that other door, if you'd still ended up dancing in the muck with us down here," Wirtram managed to, for once, develop the thought to a complete one.
He'd been a good friend, though somewhat timid, which made for a strange sight. The older miner stood at almost twice Ives' height and had a build that allowed him to carry one of the ore-carts by himself. And yet, when he had to open his mouth he became more awkward than a rancor on a ballroom dancefloor. Never judge a datacron by its cover, Ives supposed.
Usually that meant he kept quiet in some corner. But today he'd picked a spot at the bar. Next to Ives. And it seemed he had nothing better to do than dig into matters that weren't his business.
"And what's the point of wondering that?" Ives replied. "Seems a waste of time, if I'm honest, Wirt."
Wirtram considered that a moment, staring into the orange, bubbling contents of his mug. He sniffed once.
"Suppose you're right, four," Wirt said finally.
Four. A nickname on account of the fact none of the crew were able to pronounce Ives' name properly.
Ives watched the taller miner for a few moments. The man looked to be deep in thought. The miner normally lived up to his stereotype. Despite being a tall, silent type he usually lacked the 'brooding' part. Tonight was different, it seemed. Ives rarely saw the man so despondent and lost in thought.
The air hung quiet between them. An awkward silence seeped in. More awkward than a conversation with Wirt usually was. Ives shifted in his seat attempting to shake the discomfort seeping under his skin. Something was clearly troubling the older miner, and Ives had the sense the question, about past decisions, had been meant to open up a deeper conversation. That he'd meant to gather a new perspective on a problem he'd been pondering for a while now. Some mistake that Wirt regretted making or some decision that had led him down the wrong road to end up among the dregs of civilization. Heavy shit.
Ives hopped off the barstool.
"Well, I've got to go. Difficult shift behind me, I want to catch some shuteye before the next one," Ives said. He gave Wirt a pat on the shoulder, and headed off.
—
Ives steped off the surface-access elevator and headed up the path along the crater to the plains. Getting free elevator access hadn't come cheap, but that investment had been worth it. He took a deep breath of the air up on the surface, a refreshing contrast to the stale, recycled-to-barely-breathable, company-approved air down in the mines. The stars shone.
This far in the outskirts there weren't any cities to pollute the night sky. The mine, situated on some obscure moon orbiting an equally obscure gas giant, wasn't unimportant. By no means, it was a rhydonium mine. Precious fuel was pumped through the pipelines daily. It was just that no one sane wanted to settle near a rhydonium mine. Bless their hearts for it, because that meant that clear night sky didn't belong to anyone else.
Ives felt around in his pocket for a cigarette and pulled out a crooked, crumpled thing. He straightened it out, lit it, and took a drag. The smoke from his exhale was barely visible.
Unbeknownst to him, down below, an old artefact of dark power would be unearthed.
// This is pretty scattered, I do apologize. First time back to writing something proper in a hot minute. I dig horror-adjacent things and thriller-type themes. Feel free to make things the heck up, tho. I know I will.
"Wonder what?" Ives asked, holding his nose regardless of if the older miner would get offended.
"If you'd walked through that other door, if you'd still ended up dancing in the muck with us down here," Wirtram managed to, for once, develop the thought to a complete one.
He'd been a good friend, though somewhat timid, which made for a strange sight. The older miner stood at almost twice Ives' height and had a build that allowed him to carry one of the ore-carts by himself. And yet, when he had to open his mouth he became more awkward than a rancor on a ballroom dancefloor. Never judge a datacron by its cover, Ives supposed.
Usually that meant he kept quiet in some corner. But today he'd picked a spot at the bar. Next to Ives. And it seemed he had nothing better to do than dig into matters that weren't his business.
"And what's the point of wondering that?" Ives replied. "Seems a waste of time, if I'm honest, Wirt."
Wirtram considered that a moment, staring into the orange, bubbling contents of his mug. He sniffed once.
"Suppose you're right, four," Wirt said finally.
Four. A nickname on account of the fact none of the crew were able to pronounce Ives' name properly.
Ives watched the taller miner for a few moments. The man looked to be deep in thought. The miner normally lived up to his stereotype. Despite being a tall, silent type he usually lacked the 'brooding' part. Tonight was different, it seemed. Ives rarely saw the man so despondent and lost in thought.
The air hung quiet between them. An awkward silence seeped in. More awkward than a conversation with Wirt usually was. Ives shifted in his seat attempting to shake the discomfort seeping under his skin. Something was clearly troubling the older miner, and Ives had the sense the question, about past decisions, had been meant to open up a deeper conversation. That he'd meant to gather a new perspective on a problem he'd been pondering for a while now. Some mistake that Wirt regretted making or some decision that had led him down the wrong road to end up among the dregs of civilization. Heavy shit.
Ives hopped off the barstool.
"Well, I've got to go. Difficult shift behind me, I want to catch some shuteye before the next one," Ives said. He gave Wirt a pat on the shoulder, and headed off.
—
Ives steped off the surface-access elevator and headed up the path along the crater to the plains. Getting free elevator access hadn't come cheap, but that investment had been worth it. He took a deep breath of the air up on the surface, a refreshing contrast to the stale, recycled-to-barely-breathable, company-approved air down in the mines. The stars shone.
This far in the outskirts there weren't any cities to pollute the night sky. The mine, situated on some obscure moon orbiting an equally obscure gas giant, wasn't unimportant. By no means, it was a rhydonium mine. Precious fuel was pumped through the pipelines daily. It was just that no one sane wanted to settle near a rhydonium mine. Bless their hearts for it, because that meant that clear night sky didn't belong to anyone else.
Ives felt around in his pocket for a cigarette and pulled out a crooked, crumpled thing. He straightened it out, lit it, and took a drag. The smoke from his exhale was barely visible.
Unbeknownst to him, down below, an old artefact of dark power would be unearthed.
// This is pretty scattered, I do apologize. First time back to writing something proper in a hot minute. I dig horror-adjacent things and thriller-type themes. Feel free to make things the heck up, tho. I know I will.
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