John Locke
V U L K A N
No matter where you went, what city or planet, what spaceport or stations you found yourself on there was one thing that was always a certainty. Corruption and grift were a constant companion to all civilization, to any time that people were grouped together in anything larger than a family. Someone would try to play the system, to find a way to push themselves forward and find some benefit for themselves. And where one existed more than one would crawl out from under the rocks, gathering together into little groups, groups flowing together, dancing around one another in an unending dance in the dark. Yet, it was only in the dark that they could come out and be themselves, the dark of the night, of cities given over to vice. And in the dark of space.
Out here in the furthest reaches of the galaxy, away from the light of a sun with only the silvery light of stars to plumb the inky darkness of space they came out to play. An old abandoned space station had become home, a port in the dark where anyone was welcome, where anything could be brought. All the promises of Nar Shardaa without the scrutiny that the galaxy levelled on the moon, the control brought by the Hutts. The kind of place where you could come to disappear, where no one paid too much attention to the person right in front of them.
John might actually have actually enjoyed himself if it wasn’t for the blatant malfeasance that was on show on every corner. As it was he ducked his head under the popped-up collar of his coat, hands sunk into his pockets as dark eyes flicked around the street. This was the last place anyone would have expected to find a titan of industry, especially someone like him. John knew that he wasn’t much of a fighter, he’d always relied on others for that but there were some jobs that were just too sensitive, too unusual.
This station drifting in the dark wasn’t the product of human hands, of Twi’lek or Wookie creation, no it was something far older. Patched together by generations of engineers, keeping the air recycling and power running to the civilization they’d managed to eke out in the wilderness, such as it was. But the station was capable of more, so much more, a prize beyond measure in the right hands. He just had to discover the keys to opening it, to unlocking the secrets buried in the depths of the station.
Sylas Taff
Out here in the furthest reaches of the galaxy, away from the light of a sun with only the silvery light of stars to plumb the inky darkness of space they came out to play. An old abandoned space station had become home, a port in the dark where anyone was welcome, where anything could be brought. All the promises of Nar Shardaa without the scrutiny that the galaxy levelled on the moon, the control brought by the Hutts. The kind of place where you could come to disappear, where no one paid too much attention to the person right in front of them.
John might actually have actually enjoyed himself if it wasn’t for the blatant malfeasance that was on show on every corner. As it was he ducked his head under the popped-up collar of his coat, hands sunk into his pockets as dark eyes flicked around the street. This was the last place anyone would have expected to find a titan of industry, especially someone like him. John knew that he wasn’t much of a fighter, he’d always relied on others for that but there were some jobs that were just too sensitive, too unusual.
This station drifting in the dark wasn’t the product of human hands, of Twi’lek or Wookie creation, no it was something far older. Patched together by generations of engineers, keeping the air recycling and power running to the civilization they’d managed to eke out in the wilderness, such as it was. But the station was capable of more, so much more, a prize beyond measure in the right hands. He just had to discover the keys to opening it, to unlocking the secrets buried in the depths of the station.
