ROGUE THREE
The garage; if that's what it could really be called, reeked of grease and ozone. Osira Perris loved it. That scent clung to clothes long after you left, a brand stamped into fabric and skin, the kind that told anyone with half a nose where your true allegiance lay: machine and oil. It was the smell of her childhood and every year since.
The place was half workshop, half graveyard. Metal scraps and twisted panels sat in organised heaps across each corner. A fuel cell hissed faintly in the shadows. Spools of wiring uncoiled across the floor like the shed skins of some industrial serpent, yet with a strange sense of organisation. Overhead, a set of ceiling lights made up for a broken lumen that flickered with an uneven pulse, throwing bursts of white across the clutter before dimming again. Every surface was layered with tools and pieces of ship; an organised-chaotic map of where her brother's hands had been.
And at the centre of it all: THE ship.
The Rogue T-91.
Sleek lines buried beneath panels, its underbelly sparking as Kelly's welder flared. Each hiss of heat showered the deck with orange light, bright against the dim belly of the hangar. One hell of a ship, Osira thought, and right now it was the only thing she had eyes for. Well, her and her brother. He hadn't noticed her yet, of course. Typical. Like any Perris, Kelly would sooner spot a faulty circuit than his own sister standing five steps away.
She let it go on longer than necessary, a grin tugging at her mouth. Then she pitched her voice high with mock offense.
"You know, most people at least say hello when their long-lost, devastatingly charming little sister shows up." Her words bounced off durasteel walls, cutting through the steady hum of machines. She already expected the reaction, he would freeze mid-spark, mutter something, probably a curse under his breath and then either carry on working or pull himself begrudgingly out of his task. Osira was already moving in, striding across the scattered floor like she owned the place. She exaggerated each step, making a little performance out of weaving between tools and half-assembled parts.
"What? No hug? No confetti? Not even a snack waiting?" she continued, shaking her head with mock dismay. "Standards have really slipped. However, this..." Her hand tapped the cool plating of the T-91, fingertips lingering with visible affection. "This is a beauty. Who'd you steal her from, and why wasn't I invited?"
She hopped onto a crate without asking, the metal groaning under her weight, and swung her legs. Her boots drummed a lazy rhythm on the deck, the sound echoing faintly through the garage. It took her a second to realize the pattern; an old Corellian marching beat she hadn't thought about in years. Her oversized black boots made a complete mess of it, but she kept at it anyway.
"Don't tell me you didn't miss me," she pressed, smiling warmly toward her brother, tilting her head just enough for her hair to fall across her face. "Because I know you did."
Last edited: