Sid Berik
Rookie
Sid stared up at the ceiling when he woke up. He was leaning on a duffel bag. The spaceport was bustling, busy with people going to and fro. He just wanted to get home- his unit had rotated out, and he'd been granted leave. So, he had to go home. He wanted to go home, rather. Part of him wanted to stay there- even after his 30 standard days were up. Three days of travel each way, which let him have plenty of time back home.
Or, maybe too much.
The battle for Tython was costly. Even moreso than he wanted to admit. The human cost of the battle was in the thousands, on both sides. The Empire had come out on top, just barely. Not that he'd tell anyone on Coruscant of all places he was a member of the Imperial Stormtrooper Corps. No, he was a regular person, on travel. Coruscant was just simply too busy, and his identification carried him through with no problems. Maybe they knew who he was, maybe they didn't. Maybe they didn't care. Maybe they didn't want to know. Maybe they cut him some slack. Who knew, for sure? He knew only one thing for certain-
He was tired.
Emotionally and physically. Traveling around from spaceport to spaceport, was ultimately not a very luxurious affair, and the act of sleeping on benches, chairs, and the floor here and there was taxing on his body. He stared up at the ceiling, finding himself too tired to sleep again. An announcement came over the intercom, starting in Basic then rattling down to most major languages in the galaxy.
Delays due to weather and movement of Alliance military vehicles and vessels.
The Alliance was on the move again, probably. Or on patrol, or something to that effect. More time spent here. He rubbed his tired eyes and sat up, blinking. He was weary, exhausted, and all he wanted to do was go home and see his mom and dad. He'd just turned 20. He made it to his twenties, so far. Which was more than he could say for most of his comrades. He hadn't told his parents he was at Tython yet. Or maybe he never would. He'd lie and say the scars were from a training accident. Nobody blew him up, no Jedi slaughtered his friends and laughed about it and sang songs while they did it.
He'd remember that for the rest of his natural life- the haunting visage of demigods slaughtering his friends to and fro. He didn't want to, though. He wanted his friends back. He pushed the thought from his mind, standing up to walk over to a vending machine. Something caffeinated, for the love of all that was good in the galaxy. He leaned on the machine, dropping a credit chit into it, popping the tab on the can, before he slouched back in his seat across the way.
"Another day in paradise." He said to no one in particular, watching the board above them. Four more hours to his last leg of the journey. The times were constantly shifting, delays and departures fluctuating with the chaotic unpredictably of Coruscant. He just had to wait a little longer.
Then he'd go home, and be home. If only for a little while.
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