Rogue Element
Station Six Orbit, Black Sun Space
A light freighter, the Bloodhound, on a scheduled docking approach was probably the least conspicuous thing in the galaxy. Granted, it was slightly less more notable in a place as paranoid as Black Sun space, but the Bloodhound was known around Station Six. Captain Laressa was one of the most reliable small-time shipping vessels that docked with the station, bringing by fresh shipments of spice once every galactic month. No one asked where she got it, and she never asked what they did with it. It was the way the underworld worked.
This time she was smuggling in a person. Payment in advance, and all she had to do was make sure that the ship got inside the docking bay. Again, no questions asked. It was an easy job, and it didn't seem nearly risky enough...so Laressa had negotiated for double the price that the woman opened negotiations on. The fact that her passenger still didn't argue it much was a dead ringer for something foul going on. The captain readily planned to betray the living crap out of her the first chance she got, sell her to the station authorities, and cackle her way into retirement with her double payment.
As she neared the docking bay, Laressa kept smiling calmly as the crackle of the intercom. <"Bloodhound, this is Station Six. Your IFF responder checks out. Submit your docking password.">
Laressa hit a few buttons. "Already sending, Station Six." This was smooth. Clean. Just the way she liked it. It was the perfect payday and she could finally get herself a nice apartment on Coruscant, maybe with a balcony or even a pool. No complications. She even enjoyed the feeling of the ship lurching as it got caught in the station's tractor beam.
<"Code confirmed. Welcome back, Bloodhound.">
"Good to be back." She sent back through the intercom, but it really wasn't necessary. She'd already been accepted in, and her boys in the back were already getting everything ready to offload. Now all she had to do was secure her passenger, and her future was looking quite bright indeed. Idly, she reached down to place her hand on her blaster-
There was very suddenly something cold, hard, and metal against the back of her neck. "One more move and I leave you burning on the deck."
Laressa smiled and lifted her hand a little, away from the gun. "Heh. Guess you caught me." The rough woman shrugged, her other hand lifting into the air parallel the first. "Ah well, what can you do? Boys." She hesitated for several seconds, as if waiting for something. Eventually, her brow furrowed. "Bo-"
"Don't bother," came her passenger's voice again, cold as ice behind her. "I'll leave you to ponder in your final seconds in this galaxy whether I killed them or simply beat them into unconsciousness." Laressa's blood went as frigid as the voice in her ears. Had she made a mistake here? Well, obviously, but was it a mistake that actually made a difference? Or was this woman going to kill them all and take their spice anyway?
"Listen, you don't have to-" She started, but was just as quickly interrupted again.
"Just shut up. Nothing you do or say is going to change anything right now." Force, that woman's tone was like liquid death. And her hand on that blaster had to be nigh-robotic to be so calm in this kind of situation. "We both know I've already decided the outcome of this. You really should've just taken the money."
---
When the Bloodhound came to a jolting stop in one of the many docking bays of Station Six, there wasn't an upright body on-board. Scanners from docking control noted three very unconscious humans and a whole lot of spice. Still, it was a smuggler's ship. There was probably something hiding in one of the scan-proof compartments...
By the time the docking bay security team had moved in to check the ship out and lock it down, Raz had already engaged the refueling procedure and was crawling beside the pipe.
@[member="Domino"]
A light freighter, the Bloodhound, on a scheduled docking approach was probably the least conspicuous thing in the galaxy. Granted, it was slightly less more notable in a place as paranoid as Black Sun space, but the Bloodhound was known around Station Six. Captain Laressa was one of the most reliable small-time shipping vessels that docked with the station, bringing by fresh shipments of spice once every galactic month. No one asked where she got it, and she never asked what they did with it. It was the way the underworld worked.
This time she was smuggling in a person. Payment in advance, and all she had to do was make sure that the ship got inside the docking bay. Again, no questions asked. It was an easy job, and it didn't seem nearly risky enough...so Laressa had negotiated for double the price that the woman opened negotiations on. The fact that her passenger still didn't argue it much was a dead ringer for something foul going on. The captain readily planned to betray the living crap out of her the first chance she got, sell her to the station authorities, and cackle her way into retirement with her double payment.
As she neared the docking bay, Laressa kept smiling calmly as the crackle of the intercom. <"Bloodhound, this is Station Six. Your IFF responder checks out. Submit your docking password.">
Laressa hit a few buttons. "Already sending, Station Six." This was smooth. Clean. Just the way she liked it. It was the perfect payday and she could finally get herself a nice apartment on Coruscant, maybe with a balcony or even a pool. No complications. She even enjoyed the feeling of the ship lurching as it got caught in the station's tractor beam.
<"Code confirmed. Welcome back, Bloodhound.">
"Good to be back." She sent back through the intercom, but it really wasn't necessary. She'd already been accepted in, and her boys in the back were already getting everything ready to offload. Now all she had to do was secure her passenger, and her future was looking quite bright indeed. Idly, she reached down to place her hand on her blaster-
There was very suddenly something cold, hard, and metal against the back of her neck. "One more move and I leave you burning on the deck."
Laressa smiled and lifted her hand a little, away from the gun. "Heh. Guess you caught me." The rough woman shrugged, her other hand lifting into the air parallel the first. "Ah well, what can you do? Boys." She hesitated for several seconds, as if waiting for something. Eventually, her brow furrowed. "Bo-"
"Don't bother," came her passenger's voice again, cold as ice behind her. "I'll leave you to ponder in your final seconds in this galaxy whether I killed them or simply beat them into unconsciousness." Laressa's blood went as frigid as the voice in her ears. Had she made a mistake here? Well, obviously, but was it a mistake that actually made a difference? Or was this woman going to kill them all and take their spice anyway?
"Listen, you don't have to-" She started, but was just as quickly interrupted again.
"Just shut up. Nothing you do or say is going to change anything right now." Force, that woman's tone was like liquid death. And her hand on that blaster had to be nigh-robotic to be so calm in this kind of situation. "We both know I've already decided the outcome of this. You really should've just taken the money."
---
When the Bloodhound came to a jolting stop in one of the many docking bays of Station Six, there wasn't an upright body on-board. Scanners from docking control noted three very unconscious humans and a whole lot of spice. Still, it was a smuggler's ship. There was probably something hiding in one of the scan-proof compartments...
By the time the docking bay security team had moved in to check the ship out and lock it down, Raz had already engaged the refueling procedure and was crawling beside the pipe.
@[member="Domino"]