Over the rain, over the shuttle engine, there was a sharp crack. Raylin knew immediately what it was- a weapon. Slugthrower, unsuppressed. Traveling nearer rather than further. If he heard the shot and didn't feel the impact, it was close but wasn't for him. He however, heard the whizzing of the bullet and the slamming of it into the fuselage of the shuttle. It bounced around until the slug landed on the floor.
He flipped up his night vision and saw the splatter first. The bullet had traveled through and impacted someone- throwing high-velocity bloodsplatter over the cabin. He looked over himself. Not a scratch, just wet from the rain outside. He looked over the team, starting with Cassian. The General was fine. The Republic was safe from giving him a medal.
Seldan was fine. The soldier was pristine. So was the other one- he couldn't remember his name. But he was okay. Raylin's hand, free of his combat gloves, trailed over the torso of each team member. His habits as a medic took over.
Then, the principle.
His answer came when her hand grasped at his arm, screamed, then passed out. The shuttle moved rapidly, low and flying just above rooftops to avoid detections. Raylin had better places to work on patients, but he also had worse. He looked up at the team, and instantly he understood: he was now in charge of her care. Sure, he might've been outranked (by quite a bit, to say the least), but none of them were medics.
No, Raylin was the pit boss of caring for their HVT. After all, they wanted her alive. Raylin ripped the IFAK off of his kit, hastily opening it. Nitrile gloves, pressure bandages. He pointed at Cassian, the man he trusted and knew the most, to put pressure down on the wound.
While the rest of the team found a job, he sealed the doors and leaned over the bleeding Zeltron, breathing deeply and calmly while he pulled the in-flight medical kit. He opened it up, laying the bag out flat along the floor of the shuttle. The first thing that was needed- she couldn't go into shock. She was a petite, small thing, and going into shock was something to avoid. He unfurled one of the
Stim-Shots, used his teeth to uncap the plug-
And jammed it into her leg, the meatiest part he could find. The stim-shot would prevent her from going into shock, and have enough stimulants that there was a large chance she'd wake up, screaming, and, reportedly, sometimes hallucinating or incoherent. So, he looked up at the team.
"Hold her down."
The nearest surgical team was at least an hour away. Raylin eyed the in-flight kit. He'd have to push himself, remember everything he was taught and trained to do, in order to treat this woman. He turned his head towards her, prepping the scanner. He needed to know what kind of internal damage she suffered- if it had nicked anything important, and if he needed to reach inside the wound cavity and clamp off anything to prevent further internal bleeding. Sure, he could shove kolto and bacta and what have you until kingdom come- but that was a piece of tape on a dam breaking.
But he was a Pathfinder Recon Medic. He was a Commando. He was cool under pressure.
"I'll need help next few minutes if she's gonna make it."
And he wanted a drink.
Very subtly, in the most minor of ways, now that the shuttle was using no longer drawing in massive amounts of outside air- Raylin faintly smelled like cheap gin.
Faintly.