Problem Child
Step by Step
Capris didn't put much stock in positive affirmations. Her brain was much too slimy and uncooperative for them to not just slide off the dome. She was like an eel in that way—stubbornly writhing from anything conducive to a healthy environment.
And yet there was a weird, inexplicable amount of comfort to be found in those particular three words.
She could hazard a guess as to why.
Capris sighed, letting her body fall limp against the outer shell of her ship. There was nothing on the horizon but stars and inky blackness. Well, nothing but one crucial exception.
Kyric.
He was out there– promising a dawn to her solitude. Hope was always fickle with her. Weakly pulsing and tauntingly delicate like if she spent any real time examining it the seams would soften and rip. But that didn't change the fact that it did exist.
It existed because of him.
Sappy and a bit a pitiful sure, but true to form.
She pulled her knees up to her chest, used her one arm to keep them in a lock and then rested her head atop. Staring, and yearning, and chastising herself on an endless loop.
Her eyes fluttered shut on their own accord after a while, tired of her vain attempt to ward off sleep. Why would she anyway? It was her only opportunity to see him.
——————
When she opened her eyes again, prompted by a distinct smell of herb, Capris buffered.
Her shitty posture righted itself as soon as she realized where she was seated. A top a gutter, gurgling with something that was definitely not rain water.
Where the hell..?
The girl blinked, rising to her full height in slow, cautious movement.
A thick peppering of grime and soot wrapped the cityscape before her in a situationally appropriate biker jacket. Giving the appearance of tough, stained leather punched through with gunmetal. Capris felt suddenly grateful to look the part. Tatted up. Scarred. Dressed in a beige tank and scuffed jacket. Entirely and completely uninspired against the given backdrop.
Was this…Denon?
Surprisingly, for someone in her chosen vocation, she'd never been. The name just slotted itself in her brain like it'd been lying dormant. Tendrils of thought grasped it, turned it over, tried to spy her reflection on its surface.
Everything pressed in with such damming familiarity she almost felt dumb for not getting it.
Her eyes thinned as stepped over a dead body, bloated but gaunt with a vice-like grip on a bottle.
The half-gloom, jaggedly cut ever so often by flickering neon, did well in hiding some of the more unseemly alleyways. But the Force was a reliable snitch. There were enough wounded souls and acidic need to go around. It came packaged differently, but the desperation was the same as what she'd felt on Saraveen.
Bent spines huddled by trash fires, spice traded hands, and although she kept her eyes piously averted– a tall scantily clad woman rested her hip on a street lamp.
She whistled something low and seductive that had Capris's cheeks flare a shade deeper.
That got her up and moving.
Any number of criminal dealings could've brought her here. It was easy to surrender to the idea. The sudden amnesia brought on by one of the many blows to the head she'd sustained for her penchant of using her face to block.
But then she felt it again, and suddenly none of that speculation mattered.
It was like sipping wine, warmth spreading limb from limb. She remembered this feeling, as fresh and exhilarating as when she first felt it. Her head whipped around, gaze gently landing on a building.
One that admittedly looked like it shouldn't be standing.
Something told her to go in.
Kyric
Capris didn't put much stock in positive affirmations. Her brain was much too slimy and uncooperative for them to not just slide off the dome. She was like an eel in that way—stubbornly writhing from anything conducive to a healthy environment.
And yet there was a weird, inexplicable amount of comfort to be found in those particular three words.
She could hazard a guess as to why.
Capris sighed, letting her body fall limp against the outer shell of her ship. There was nothing on the horizon but stars and inky blackness. Well, nothing but one crucial exception.
Kyric.
He was out there– promising a dawn to her solitude. Hope was always fickle with her. Weakly pulsing and tauntingly delicate like if she spent any real time examining it the seams would soften and rip. But that didn't change the fact that it did exist.
It existed because of him.
Sappy and a bit a pitiful sure, but true to form.
She pulled her knees up to her chest, used her one arm to keep them in a lock and then rested her head atop. Staring, and yearning, and chastising herself on an endless loop.
Her eyes fluttered shut on their own accord after a while, tired of her vain attempt to ward off sleep. Why would she anyway? It was her only opportunity to see him.
——————
When she opened her eyes again, prompted by a distinct smell of herb, Capris buffered.
Her shitty posture righted itself as soon as she realized where she was seated. A top a gutter, gurgling with something that was definitely not rain water.
Where the hell..?
The girl blinked, rising to her full height in slow, cautious movement.
A thick peppering of grime and soot wrapped the cityscape before her in a situationally appropriate biker jacket. Giving the appearance of tough, stained leather punched through with gunmetal. Capris felt suddenly grateful to look the part. Tatted up. Scarred. Dressed in a beige tank and scuffed jacket. Entirely and completely uninspired against the given backdrop.
Was this…Denon?
Surprisingly, for someone in her chosen vocation, she'd never been. The name just slotted itself in her brain like it'd been lying dormant. Tendrils of thought grasped it, turned it over, tried to spy her reflection on its surface.
Everything pressed in with such damming familiarity she almost felt dumb for not getting it.
Her eyes thinned as stepped over a dead body, bloated but gaunt with a vice-like grip on a bottle.
The half-gloom, jaggedly cut ever so often by flickering neon, did well in hiding some of the more unseemly alleyways. But the Force was a reliable snitch. There were enough wounded souls and acidic need to go around. It came packaged differently, but the desperation was the same as what she'd felt on Saraveen.
Bent spines huddled by trash fires, spice traded hands, and although she kept her eyes piously averted– a tall scantily clad woman rested her hip on a street lamp.
She whistled something low and seductive that had Capris's cheeks flare a shade deeper.
That got her up and moving.
Any number of criminal dealings could've brought her here. It was easy to surrender to the idea. The sudden amnesia brought on by one of the many blows to the head she'd sustained for her penchant of using her face to block.
But then she felt it again, and suddenly none of that speculation mattered.
It was like sipping wine, warmth spreading limb from limb. She remembered this feeling, as fresh and exhilarating as when she first felt it. Her head whipped around, gaze gently landing on a building.
One that admittedly looked like it shouldn't be standing.
Something told her to go in.
