Cato Fett
Character
“Crime when it succeeds is called virtue.”
-Lucius Annaeus Seneca-
-KRZZT-
“-day, due to a drastic rise in local crime rates, the municipality of Q'uwon-In-Krait has taken steps to disband its municipal police force in favour of -”
-KRZZT-
“-count sixteen unaffiliated Killik hivers massacred in -:
-KRZZT-
“-mass grave of over fifty five bodies uncovered by city workers-”
-KRZZT-
“Khard Loray, self-appointed Mayor of the M6, has been discovered dead in his public offices after a group of armed gunme-”
-KRZZT-
“-ourteen dead at a birthday party following a confrontation with-”
-KRZZT-
“-attacked with a combination of small arms and petrol bombs, inciting a riot spree lasting over-”
-KRZZT-
“-issued a statement with the body telling that supporters of the Ex-Oh cartel will be punished-”
-KRZZT-
“-enty-seven atmo-water farmers were discovered dead with signs of torture and mutilation, before deca-”
-KRRZZZT-
“-thirty for people slain over twenty fours in the-”
-KRRZZT-
“-deadliest year for the Potomo County-”
-KRZT!-
“-nine bulk-loaders discovered with the bodies of-”
-KRRRZT!-
“-ucting an investigation into prior beheadings, eleven private agents were ambushed and killed-”
-KRRZZT!-
“-ten dead in a shootout between rival cartels for control of Trevel'ka's lucrative smuggling routes-”
-KRZZT!-
“-gang rivalries reach an all time high and low with the discovery of over sixty mutilated remains left draped along a major speeder lane-”
-KKRRZT!-
“-being torn apart and there's nothing we can do. Nothing to be d-”
-KRRZT!-
“-one hundred sixty five migrants taken from the Bakeb Memorial Port in open dayli-”
-KRRZT!-
“-everal port towns have been entirely abandoned in the face of escalating violence between the Second Sons and-”
-KRZRZT!-
“-oordinated attacks across Reyloda appear aimed at damaging local infrastructure and neutralizing-”
-KRRRT!-
“-forty slain, including twenty at a rehabilitation centre-”
-KRZZZIT!-
“-graffiti left at the scene indicate a revenge killing aimed at goading-”
-KZZZT!!-
“It never ends. We just get more and more numb. 'Till we get tired of that and kill them back.”
The five minute summary precis clicked dead in his ear. Cato Fett adjusted the train of a rain poncho and hooked the hood and cowl forward, the edge of his polymer horn catching the inner lining and anchoring it against a slanting wind. Weather modifier stations in high orbit, built to aid in combating air pollution crisis', had gone erratic. Local comm.radio forecasted six days of downpour. An inch of grey and bracken water flowed, parted, and splashed across his boot soles. Ground-cars washed by, butting up against the sidewalks from meter deep potholes still full of foetid materials from the last rainfall. Cato turned aside from a broad-faced transit bus pulling up to a bent sign-post along his side of the boulevard, ignoring a cold drench running down both pant legs. Local time was 23:09 on the wrist-chron and three hours until cyclical midnight. He stopped under the cone of a street lamp broken, rusted, and scavenged, peering through a part in the rise of jammed architecture. The skyline was a dark vomit of acid yellows and mulch, lit by refuse piles burning at the city edges and the cram of two-hundred fifty million locals that required light sources at any and all hours of the day. Cato stepped out of the way of another swell of sidewalk traffic, standing under the dark offered by an abandoned shop front. Testing the door realized that it was kept locked by a thin magnetic strip and a bit of rust. The Mandalorian disappeared inside, into the black.
On Trevel'ka, as many as two score population wells demanded recognizance as the planetary capital. Only Jahrak, by dint of numbers in both census and developed hectares, stood virtually uncontested. The city appeared as a bruised ulcer or lesion growing out of the equator, expanding atop former marshlands drained to bedrock to make way for renewal programs that promised elevation out of abysmal unemployment and crime rates. Credits and fortunes wired into the city failed to generate the desired change. Business that was destined to reinvigorate a sprawling downtown sector shied away at the last minute, scared. Jahrak rooted down, retaining the grease of its hard won glamour: the pit of merging cultures forced to get along or fight for space and resource, under a constant, polluted twilight and distant refinery towers.
Cato settled behind the cover of a broken display case and rotten, fallen shelves. The floor was a carpet of shattered tiling, rubber shavings, peaks of exposed floor joists, and further detritus. He discarded the poncho: a cheap length of green plastic, bought for a credit handful from a child street vendor. Beneath that, a set of fashioned drab olive fatigues bound down by an equipment harness and field-ready fashionings, a shemagh scarf wrapped under the collar. He took the weight of a roped duffel sack off his shoulder, unzipping, rolling its contents out gently. A wood stocked sniper rifle operated with an oiled bolt-action, an effective relic. A salvaged Arma-Blast MRA assault rifle out of stamped metals and a temperfoam grip and a thick wire-stock. A pistol, with modest calibre, the grip worn in places.
Poor fair, by comparison. So backalley stories went, eight hundred years prior and nowadays, Mandalorians worth their salt walked dressed in contoured armouries of power weapons and beskar plating, untouchable. Cato hoisted the sniper around and over his shoulder blade, holstered the assault back behind the left hip, the pistol on the right. Ammunition, multi-tools, and other pieces of re-used kit were fitted into the pouches, satchels, and pockets sewn into the kevlar harnessing. His preference keyed towards light mobility and uninhibited motion, a longknife operator that could slide through urban and rural defences soundlessly, quickly. Otherwise, he'd trained and still worked to fortify his physicality. Beskar within. Beskar without. Cato rose, readied the slug pistol and slipped out through the shop's disintegrated back door.
Out into a tight alleyway, with a meter's give of span. Along the narrow tract, stepping along a carpet of white-plastic refuse bags that were all split and humidifying their contents. The stench combined roiling milk and hops, so sourly pungent and thick with fermentation it forced even the local ferro-rats to pause and heave. Cato did up his shemagh into a makeshift mask and climbed the rungs of a well-aged maintenance ladder. Up, along a back wall with crumbling stucco and air-conditioner vanes, onto a gravel-raked rooftop nineteen stories above the block. The overcast night bubbled and frothed overhead, soaking him through fatigue and under-armour. Cato sheltered under an abandoned squatting 'house': water-proofed tripleply cardboard with a slanted corrugated iron roof, the walls draped curtains of tarpaulin. He removed a roll of grease paper, smoothing it out over a knee: a topographical printout of 'Main Boulevard' and twenty kilometres going east, 'Hell's Basin'.
The printout came from a disused GPS satellite and an older on-board pict log dating before the rains. From the map, Cato freed his binocs and peered out from under the iron awning. It was an uneven landscape of dark roofs and staggered outlines, with an omnipresent lumen halo of white light banking up from labyrinth streets. Open, lit windows blinked back in the night. He panned for a long minute, wishing the binocs were fitted for tritium lenses. Natural night vision sometimes only went so far. There! A spindly shape or unshape, hobbling. Between a set of high rise, low income housing towers, pausing under a brief glare of sheet lightning.
A pale worm, manoeuvring on elephantine legs, grasping and flailing at wet air. It seemed to pause and suck in a lungful, swinging its head round. The skull was less bone and porous cartilage, more foot long open sucker lined with solid, jagged clusters of incisor-teeth constantly gnashing. Cato picked out brightened saliva trails running between rainfall streaks. The Lugubraa shouldered forward and hunched back into an even, plodding gait, swinging at the hip. And then gone.
Cato replaced the binocs away and edged out into the rain, leaving the squatter shanty behind. Hell's Basin overlaid his mind's eye as a partitioned map, dividing down in threes, segmented according to industrial zones ringing old factory spaces. The Hutt, the Rekali, confessed that the biding force leveraging control over the Basin had submerged its presence into the local underground. If the Mark could be anywhere, bent cred to a platinum bar, it'd be in one of those three strongholds. Cato made the jump to an adjacent roof and hunched into a hunting creep, climbing off a gutter edge down an air-exchange tube popping out a wall of exposed plumbing. Down, to the outline of a fire-escape, secreting past lit floors with woke denizens, and onto a sky-bridge. Somewhere was a dull sub-bass throb that couldn't have been his own heartbeat. Maybe Trevel'ka's own pulse, beating away through the night, lulling and waking in equal measure. The Mandalorian slid through a thin, high alley between high rise towers and beyond to another sky-bridge. Hell's Basin waited dressed in water and dirty light. An uneven city-scape burning fuel drums into the long midnight, with every shadow long, and dark knives waiting for one misstep.
Cato Fett snorted rain from his nostrils, hefted the easy rifle weight against his hands and shoulder, and began scaling sou-sou-east.