Amea Virou
Snowbound
The bass kick seemed to hit with a slow rhythm that was just one step ahead of a drugged out spiceheads heart. Each snare felt like a bullet to the chest, each stroke of the hi-hat like a snake’s tongue to the ear. The harmonic synthesizers held on to a simple pattern of notes that seemed to extend and grow deep into one another and soothe the otherwise painful sensory overload of the drums. In the middle of the chaos there was the bass that tickled the skin unlike anything that could be described as natural. The crowd was loving it and it showed in the way they seemed to move with the torpor of a sickly turtle.
Must have been something they added to the fog machines, Amea figured. The effects were there, but beyond an increase in sensory function it seemed to do her very little. The fog that swept around her legs as she wandered towards the back rooms had started to reach for her knees at this point, yet it was nothing compared to the cacophonous dead center of the noise from the club.
Located down a small flight of stairs in a square-like pit there was a dance floor that changed shape and color with each beat that passed the occupants by. Though it was hard to tell through the fog it was stuffed to the brim with enough preppy kids to fund a reconstruction of Coruscant’s heart twice over and that was including both a Sith and a Jedi temple. Some dancing solo, most of them with a companion, others enjoying a more intimate connection while they cupped each other’s faces to ground themselves between reality and their shared fantasy.
Opposite of the dance pit there was a door guarded by two guards in black suits, a hefty lock, and another dozen souls with guns on the other end who would be displeased should Amea simply come barging in. She should have played it smart, tried to get at them from an angle, but quite frankly she had tried this tactic so many times before and it had always been more trouble than it was worth. Someone always got away and the problem resurfaced later.
With one swift move Amea lifted the gun on her belt from its holster and shot it at the man on the left. There was no flash, no gunshot or noise as she fired. Just a man, a good chunk of electrical current, and the twitch of his friend that stood confused by his side. He crumpled over, shivering ever so slightly as his consciousness slowly drained away into slumber. The guard on the right tried to reach for his own gun but found himself stopped. A hand latched onto his wrist before his head was pushed back against the wall with enough force for him to topple over and join his friend in an impromptu nap.
Pleased with the direct route having worked Amea knelt down to pick up one of their keycards, her eyes shooting over her shoulder and into the clueless crowds one last time before she opened the door and stepped into the back of the club.
Crime rested for no-one, but neither did the justice due either.
Must have been something they added to the fog machines, Amea figured. The effects were there, but beyond an increase in sensory function it seemed to do her very little. The fog that swept around her legs as she wandered towards the back rooms had started to reach for her knees at this point, yet it was nothing compared to the cacophonous dead center of the noise from the club.
Located down a small flight of stairs in a square-like pit there was a dance floor that changed shape and color with each beat that passed the occupants by. Though it was hard to tell through the fog it was stuffed to the brim with enough preppy kids to fund a reconstruction of Coruscant’s heart twice over and that was including both a Sith and a Jedi temple. Some dancing solo, most of them with a companion, others enjoying a more intimate connection while they cupped each other’s faces to ground themselves between reality and their shared fantasy.
Opposite of the dance pit there was a door guarded by two guards in black suits, a hefty lock, and another dozen souls with guns on the other end who would be displeased should Amea simply come barging in. She should have played it smart, tried to get at them from an angle, but quite frankly she had tried this tactic so many times before and it had always been more trouble than it was worth. Someone always got away and the problem resurfaced later.
With one swift move Amea lifted the gun on her belt from its holster and shot it at the man on the left. There was no flash, no gunshot or noise as she fired. Just a man, a good chunk of electrical current, and the twitch of his friend that stood confused by his side. He crumpled over, shivering ever so slightly as his consciousness slowly drained away into slumber. The guard on the right tried to reach for his own gun but found himself stopped. A hand latched onto his wrist before his head was pushed back against the wall with enough force for him to topple over and join his friend in an impromptu nap.
Pleased with the direct route having worked Amea knelt down to pick up one of their keycards, her eyes shooting over her shoulder and into the clueless crowds one last time before she opened the door and stepped into the back of the club.
Crime rested for no-one, but neither did the justice due either.