Ashin Varanin
Professional Enabler
The view out the skyhook window was something else. Skyhooks were beautiful, terrible things in the wrong hands, or just intrinsically. There was something awful and sublime about staring down at Coruscant from orbit -- from something other than a starship. A ship, or a star-shaped station like the abandoned Krayt one out there, at least had the capability to move away, but a skyhook could either stay tethered or it could fall. Her gut said so, anyway. A broken skyhook could land itself safely with repulsors; she knew that on an intellectual level.
In a cocktail dress, at probably the fanciest restaurant and social function she'd ever infiltrated, she stared out the viewport and challenged herself with vertigo. The starscape thrilled her; the long fall chilled her. Grav wells were death. Any spacer knew that. Out there at the distant star-shaped station, ships moved freely, unconcerned with the grav well or the Sith presence that controlled this world. She envied their freedom. The cocktail dress felt like chains.
So did the company. That was another reason she sat alone by the viewport with a glass of liquor, watching lines of thematically opaque comm updates scroll down her datapad.
In a cocktail dress, at probably the fanciest restaurant and social function she'd ever infiltrated, she stared out the viewport and challenged herself with vertigo. The starscape thrilled her; the long fall chilled her. Grav wells were death. Any spacer knew that. Out there at the distant star-shaped station, ships moved freely, unconcerned with the grav well or the Sith presence that controlled this world. She envied their freedom. The cocktail dress felt like chains.
So did the company. That was another reason she sat alone by the viewport with a glass of liquor, watching lines of thematically opaque comm updates scroll down her datapad.