Onley Xiangu
Scum of the Earth
Shezi was prone to symbolism, a woman like to find portent in the bottom of her teacup or meaning in the strewn guts of another streetrat who’d been foolish enough to try and steal from her. But no matter how hard she pressed herself, she couldn’t find something to represent how she felt about her being. Who was Shezi? Who would she be?
It was with the same seeming aimlessness that she found herself in Wild Space. She’d heard the stretch of stars was home to outlaws, neutrals – those with skill protecting their slice of the Galaxy without lines to make things black and white. They’d been rumors, whispers; the true intentions of the Fringe were perhaps ambiguous to even the galaxy at large, let alone the filtered information that made it all the way down to the Shezi on the streets of some gutter planet. She’d heard of the concept of warring groups but had always given it little thought – her corner, hocking her ability to read symbols and guess with great accuracy the future from a customer’s dreams or blood, seemed far more important. But she’d been restless. And the Fringe had sounded right. Regardless, she’d found her way to the capital city on the semi-industrial planet of Annaj with relative ease. From there she’d searched out anybody she could who might point her in the right direction for contacting said shadowy organization.
Inevitably she’d instead found herself somewhere she shouldn’t be, slipping her tiny frame right behind an admittedly lax guard who turned his back just as he was going to insure the door had locked. She’d thought she’d been quiet but maybe they had other means of surveillance – that seemed the most likely as soon as she found out the cavernous units she’d been poking around in belonged to the very organization she was looking to get in contact with. After she’d been caught they’d left her in some room off to the side, telling her someone would be in to question her. Was it her fault she’d been holding a very expensive, very dangerous, very rare, and very important weapon the Fringe had just gotten a hold of? She didn’t think so. It just looked like it’d blow someone to pieces, the only fact that interested her. In retrospect it probably looked really bad, but she didn’t care. She’d been in tighter jams.
She’d found a broken droid to try and reassemble while she waited, pressing a finger to the shiny knob on what appeared to be its face. The entire thing folded in on itself, making an awful noise and clattering around, off-balance. “Fok, kak!” she swore loudly in her affected patois, kicking the thing to shut it up.
It was with the same seeming aimlessness that she found herself in Wild Space. She’d heard the stretch of stars was home to outlaws, neutrals – those with skill protecting their slice of the Galaxy without lines to make things black and white. They’d been rumors, whispers; the true intentions of the Fringe were perhaps ambiguous to even the galaxy at large, let alone the filtered information that made it all the way down to the Shezi on the streets of some gutter planet. She’d heard of the concept of warring groups but had always given it little thought – her corner, hocking her ability to read symbols and guess with great accuracy the future from a customer’s dreams or blood, seemed far more important. But she’d been restless. And the Fringe had sounded right. Regardless, she’d found her way to the capital city on the semi-industrial planet of Annaj with relative ease. From there she’d searched out anybody she could who might point her in the right direction for contacting said shadowy organization.
Inevitably she’d instead found herself somewhere she shouldn’t be, slipping her tiny frame right behind an admittedly lax guard who turned his back just as he was going to insure the door had locked. She’d thought she’d been quiet but maybe they had other means of surveillance – that seemed the most likely as soon as she found out the cavernous units she’d been poking around in belonged to the very organization she was looking to get in contact with. After she’d been caught they’d left her in some room off to the side, telling her someone would be in to question her. Was it her fault she’d been holding a very expensive, very dangerous, very rare, and very important weapon the Fringe had just gotten a hold of? She didn’t think so. It just looked like it’d blow someone to pieces, the only fact that interested her. In retrospect it probably looked really bad, but she didn’t care. She’d been in tighter jams.
She’d found a broken droid to try and reassemble while she waited, pressing a finger to the shiny knob on what appeared to be its face. The entire thing folded in on itself, making an awful noise and clattering around, off-balance. “Fok, kak!” she swore loudly in her affected patois, kicking the thing to shut it up.
[member="Jared Ovmar"]