Deanez
Dean
Breakfast unfolded without ceremony.
Dean sat at a small table shaded by wide-leafed trees, the surface cool beneath her forearms, a datapad resting between two untouched cups of tea. The planet insisted on calm in ways she found mildly suspicious—soft light, slow air currents, the distant sound of water moving with no urgency at all. She had already noted the exits, the sightlines, the nearest cover, and then dismissed them as adequate to allow her attention elsewhere.
Rynar ate across from her.
Not quickly. Not distracted. He tore bread with his hands, paused between bites, occasionally glancing out toward the horizon as if committing the place to memory. He looked healthier than he had on Bastion, more grounded, less like someone waiting for the next interruption. Dean registered all of it without comment, the way she did most things that mattered.
She tapped the datapad awake.
A scroll of ship schematics filled the screen, cleanly organized. Mid-range civilian hulls. Retrofitted freighters. Courier-class vessels with upgraded engines and questionable histories. She had filtered aggressively already—no transponder anomalies she could not correct, no maintenance gaps that suggested structural neglect, no designs that relied on single points of failure.
Her finger paused on one listing.
"Frame is reinforced along the spine," she said calmly, not looking up. "It would survive atmospheric entry under stress. Power routing has three redundancies, two of which are isolated from the main control systems. If we lost the cockpit, it would still fly."
Rynar leaned closer, chewing slowly, eyes following the schematic as it rotated. He did not speak. He did not need to. The angle of his head told her what he was looking for instead.
She adjusted the display, pulling up internal layouts.
"Crew quarters are compact," Dean continued. "Efficient. Storage is adequate but not generous. Life support is rated for extended operation, but only if maintained properly."
She felt him pause beside her, the faint stillness of attention, and she added, quieter, "It would not be comfortable."
Rynar reached for his cup then, sipping, eyes still on the pad. He lingered on the galley schematic longer than the engine readout. In the sleeping area. On the small, almost apologetic common space tucked between systems.
Dean noticed.
She moved to the next listing with a flick of her thumb.
"This one sacrifices speed for stability," she said. "Wider hull. Better internal volume. Slower acceleration, but smoother travel. You would feel the motion less."
She stopped herself from saying you would sleep better.
Rynar finished his bite and nodded once, subtle, thoughtful. He rested his forearm on the table near the datapad, close enough that she could feel the warmth through the stone.
Dean zoomed in on the engine housing.
"Escape vectors are limited," she admitted. "If pursued, this ship survives by enduring, not outrunning. It assumes you will live aboard it, not just use it."
Her words slowed as she said it.
Rynar's gaze flicked briefly to her, then back to the screen. He did not argue. He did not correct. He stayed there, present, eating breakfast like a man who intended to be alive long enough to care where he slept.
Dean exhaled, the sound controlled but quieter than usual.
She toggled the datapad to split view, placing the two ships side by side. One optimized for survival under fire. One optimized for days that stretched without crisis.
"This is the difference," she said, more to herself than to him. "I choose frames that hold under pressure. You choose engines that don't burn out the people inside them."
Rynar swallowed, set his cup down, and reached out to scroll back not past her choice, but not away from it either. He stopped with the listings aligned, his hand resting beside hers on the edge of the pad.
Dean did not pull away.
She looked at the paired schematics again, sunlight glinting off the screen, the quiet planet surrounding them with unreasonable peace.
"For once," she said softly, "we have time to decide."
Rynar took another bite of bread, unhurried, and leaned in closer to look.
Dean let the datapad remain open between them, balanced not on urgency or threat, but on something new.
Sustainability.
And the possibility that survivability need not stand alone.
Rynar Solde
Dean sat at a small table shaded by wide-leafed trees, the surface cool beneath her forearms, a datapad resting between two untouched cups of tea. The planet insisted on calm in ways she found mildly suspicious—soft light, slow air currents, the distant sound of water moving with no urgency at all. She had already noted the exits, the sightlines, the nearest cover, and then dismissed them as adequate to allow her attention elsewhere.
Rynar ate across from her.
Not quickly. Not distracted. He tore bread with his hands, paused between bites, occasionally glancing out toward the horizon as if committing the place to memory. He looked healthier than he had on Bastion, more grounded, less like someone waiting for the next interruption. Dean registered all of it without comment, the way she did most things that mattered.
She tapped the datapad awake.
A scroll of ship schematics filled the screen, cleanly organized. Mid-range civilian hulls. Retrofitted freighters. Courier-class vessels with upgraded engines and questionable histories. She had filtered aggressively already—no transponder anomalies she could not correct, no maintenance gaps that suggested structural neglect, no designs that relied on single points of failure.
Her finger paused on one listing.
"Frame is reinforced along the spine," she said calmly, not looking up. "It would survive atmospheric entry under stress. Power routing has three redundancies, two of which are isolated from the main control systems. If we lost the cockpit, it would still fly."
Rynar leaned closer, chewing slowly, eyes following the schematic as it rotated. He did not speak. He did not need to. The angle of his head told her what he was looking for instead.
She adjusted the display, pulling up internal layouts.
"Crew quarters are compact," Dean continued. "Efficient. Storage is adequate but not generous. Life support is rated for extended operation, but only if maintained properly."
She felt him pause beside her, the faint stillness of attention, and she added, quieter, "It would not be comfortable."
Rynar reached for his cup then, sipping, eyes still on the pad. He lingered on the galley schematic longer than the engine readout. In the sleeping area. On the small, almost apologetic common space tucked between systems.
Dean noticed.
She moved to the next listing with a flick of her thumb.
"This one sacrifices speed for stability," she said. "Wider hull. Better internal volume. Slower acceleration, but smoother travel. You would feel the motion less."
She stopped herself from saying you would sleep better.
Rynar finished his bite and nodded once, subtle, thoughtful. He rested his forearm on the table near the datapad, close enough that she could feel the warmth through the stone.
Dean zoomed in on the engine housing.
"Escape vectors are limited," she admitted. "If pursued, this ship survives by enduring, not outrunning. It assumes you will live aboard it, not just use it."
Her words slowed as she said it.
Rynar's gaze flicked briefly to her, then back to the screen. He did not argue. He did not correct. He stayed there, present, eating breakfast like a man who intended to be alive long enough to care where he slept.
Dean exhaled, the sound controlled but quieter than usual.
She toggled the datapad to split view, placing the two ships side by side. One optimized for survival under fire. One optimized for days that stretched without crisis.
"This is the difference," she said, more to herself than to him. "I choose frames that hold under pressure. You choose engines that don't burn out the people inside them."
Rynar swallowed, set his cup down, and reached out to scroll back not past her choice, but not away from it either. He stopped with the listings aligned, his hand resting beside hers on the edge of the pad.
Dean did not pull away.
She looked at the paired schematics again, sunlight glinting off the screen, the quiet planet surrounding them with unreasonable peace.
"For once," she said softly, "we have time to decide."
Rynar took another bite of bread, unhurried, and leaned in closer to look.
Dean let the datapad remain open between them, balanced not on urgency or threat, but on something new.
Sustainability.
And the possibility that survivability need not stand alone.