Smooth Criminal
You've been hit by... you've been struck by...
Kinley Pryse doesn't cheat fate. She shuffles it and decides when the game ends.
The neon never slept on Nar Shaddaa, it only blinked, like it knew too much and dared you to notice.
Kinley Pryse moved through the crowd like she owned the duracrete under her boots. Leather jacket scuffed just enough to look earned, blaster riding low at her hip, chin high, full swagger, no apologies. The kind of walk that told bouncers not to bother and told predators to pick an easier meal. She didn't trust anyone who smiled too easily down here. In her line of work, trust was a liability, a slow poison you swallowed because you were tired of watching your back.
And she was very, very tired.
The bar was a dive even by Nar Shaddaa standards, low ceiling, stained transparisteel, and music that rattled the bones instead of entertaining them. Kinley scanned the room out of habit: exits first, then hands, then faces. No immediate threats. A few hopeful idiots. A few professionals who clocked her and immediately decided she wasn't worth the trouble.
Good instincts.
She slid into a booth near the back, one that gave her a clear view of the door and just enough shadow to disappear into if she needed to. The table was sticky. The air smelled like spice, ozone, and old regrets. Perfect.
Flint would hate this place. That thought almost made her smile. Her jaw tightened instead. Flint didn't just hate places, he hated disobedience. He hated distance. And lately, he took it out her father. The image came unbidden: her father on Ord Mantell, hands shaking as he tried to joke through the pain, the blood crusted along the side of his head where an ear used to be.
That had been the moment Kinley stopped pretending she could manage this alone. Relocating her father was the right move. It was also a death sentence if done wrong. Flint would be watching the assisted living home, watching her, waiting for the smallest slip. One mistake and this wouldn't end with a missing ear.
Which was why she was here.
Asking for help.
The word still tasted wrong.
Kinley leaned back, draping one arm over the booth seat, posture relaxed, eyes sharp. She ordered a drink she didn't plan to finish and let the minutes pass. She hated being early, but she hated being followed more.
She didn't know Acier well. That was the problem, and the solution. An old acquaintance, a handful of shared moments, nothing solid enough to be leveraged. And yet… something about Acier had lodged itself in Kinley's instincts, that quiet internal voice she'd learned to obey or bleed.
Trust, as much as she was capable of it.
Her fingers tapped once against the table. Then stilled. Kinley lifted her glass of non-alcoholic beer, caught her reflection in the murky surface, hard eyes, crooked smile, a woman who looked like she always had the upper hand.
The door slid open with a hiss.
She didn't look up right away.
Swagger intact. Nerves locked down. Decision made.
Whatever happened next, Kinley Pryse wasn't backing out now.
A Smooth Criminal
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