Devin Virell
Redline
Devin wasn’t exactly sure when he’d drifted this far off the Path.. only that it had happened quietly, the way a ship slips off without anyone touching the controls. One day he was flying an X‑wing over Odessa on another patrol run. The next, that same starfighter sat in a hangar he hadn't seen in months while he rode a commercial transport bound for Nar Shaddaa. Somewhere between all the hyperspace lanes, he’d begun to lose his purpose..
Not the first time he’d slide backward either. The lower levels of Coruscant had a way of imprinting on people.. on him, especially. Nar Shaddaa was a mirror. And since that battle over Atrisia, a piece of him loosened. The lucky bastard energy, though? That was still there. Devin was on a streak these last few nights. Not enough to get rich.. but plenty enough to stay interested. The House of Iron was exactly where he planned to keep it going, too.
He weaved through the crowds with that usual rhythm of swagger and survival instinct. A worn jacket was hanging open at the collar. The thing had seen better years.. never mind days. Frayed seams, there was a patch or two barely hanging on, and it had even survived a handful of scrapes out back. Under that was a plain shirt. Cargo pants that no longer carried their original color and scuffed boots finished the look. Just one outfit to his name besides that infamous orange flightsuit.
Music thumped through the floor, bass vibrating. The air was a mix of perfume and questionable ambition. Pupils were blown wide, and it wasn’t from the lighting. Something was buzzing under the surface. Wrong crowd again; so, with them came the wrong habits. He’d quit again soon. At least, that’s what he kept telling himself.
Then it came into view, the sabacc table, a divine altar that always called. Typical Corellian Spike rules.. just the way he liked it. Devin slid into an open seat and tossed his credits into both the main and sabacc pot as if he’d been doing this since he first learned to walk. The dealer was sentient, which he preferred. Droids couldn’t be bribed.. and they didn’t really have tells either. Sentients had everything. Tonight it was a Mirialan. His expression was blank.. too professional. Definitely trying too hard. And that made Devin’s lips curve with mirth.
Two cards slid across the table. Of course, he caught them with ease, shielding them from the others. His awareness was sharp; the tap of a heel under the table, a Nikto’s jaw clenching every time he tried to relax. Maybe this was home.. not the ship or the Path.. just this chaos.
A grin came easily. “Well,” he drawled, “I just want to say, statistically? One of you is about to lose everything you own, and it’s.. probably not me. Luck and I are finally back on speaking terms again.”
A Davorian scoffed, and another human muttered something under his breath. All of that was filed away. Every single reaction was a tool.
Some Nikto raised a brow. “You planning to play or just talk us to death?”
“Can’t multitask? Sad,” Devin shot back. “Mental tactics? Just garnish on the plate.”
He managed to coax an amused huff from the Miralian dealer that time. Finally, he leaned forward, elbows on the table and glanced back down to his cards.
Yeah. Maybe the Path was overrated.
“Alright. If I go broke tonight, I expect at least one of you to pretend you feel bad.”