Ana Rix
Character
Ana accepted the grease-rag without comment, wiping her hands carefully before folding it once and setting it within reach instead of dropping it on the deck. Practical habits, even when things calmed down.
She glanced toward the cockpit displays as hyperspace smoothed out, the familiar stretch resolving without the usual complaints from the ship. That earned a small nod.
"Stable output, clean timing," she said, matter-of-fact. "The system just needed to stop fighting itself."
At his offer, the corner of her mouth curved faintly. Not dismissive. Not tempted either.
"Appreciate it," Ana replied evenly. "But I don't stay in one cockpit long enough to be useful that way. I'm better when I can step in, fix what's breaking, and move on before I start rearranging things that don't need it."
She shifted slightly in her seat, posture relaxed now that the immediate risk had passed.
"And for what it's worth," she added, a little warmer, "your ship listens once it trusts you. That counts for something."
Her gaze flicked briefly to the grey in his beard, not lingering, just noticing.
"Get some rest when you can," Ana said. "Machines aren't the only things that burn out from overclocking."
Gimbal
She glanced toward the cockpit displays as hyperspace smoothed out, the familiar stretch resolving without the usual complaints from the ship. That earned a small nod.
"Stable output, clean timing," she said, matter-of-fact. "The system just needed to stop fighting itself."
At his offer, the corner of her mouth curved faintly. Not dismissive. Not tempted either.
"Appreciate it," Ana replied evenly. "But I don't stay in one cockpit long enough to be useful that way. I'm better when I can step in, fix what's breaking, and move on before I start rearranging things that don't need it."
She shifted slightly in her seat, posture relaxed now that the immediate risk had passed.
"And for what it's worth," she added, a little warmer, "your ship listens once it trusts you. That counts for something."
Her gaze flicked briefly to the grey in his beard, not lingering, just noticing.
"Get some rest when you can," Ana said. "Machines aren't the only things that burn out from overclocking."