Acier Moonbound
Son of None
U P P E R- D O C K I N G- B A Y
D E N O N
I N N E R- R I M
The sound of blaster fire cracked through the docking bay, chasing echoes down durasteel corridors. Screams followed - sharp, panicked, scattering like pigeons in an open square.D E N O N
I N N E R- R I M

Acier's boots slammed hard against the floor, every footfall fueled by adrenaline. Sweat traced lines down his temple as he ducked low, blaster bolts sizzling past him in rapid succession. He returned fire without stopping to aim, more to buy space than win the fight. His breathing was ragged. Too ragged.
He'd stayed on Denon longer than he should have. The stunt at the Blue Drift a couple months back that riot trooper's arm flying off in front of a dozen cameras—had bought him attention. The wrong kind. Now the bounty hunters were swarming like mynocks. Ace needed off-world. Fast.
Sliding over a cargo sled mid-sprint, he hit the ground rolling and came up running again, momentum now the only thing keeping him upright.
Dozens of bay entrances whipped past in a blur. Then he saw it: a freighter tucked into a far bay. Wide-bodied, scarred, ugly as hell, like it hadn't seen a proper tune-up since before the war with the Bryn. Perfect. No one would miss it. And if they did, too late. He could fix what mattered later.
Ace banked hard, dragging his hand across the duracrete for balance as he threw himself into the hangar. He didn't hesitate, raised his blaster and fired into the access panel. Sparks burst out. Behind him, the bay doors slammed shut. It wouldn't hold forever. But it didn't need to. He was betting his life on just five more minutes.
Ace dashed up the ramp, heart hammering against his ribs as the freighter's hatch sealed behind him. The ship groaned like it resented the intrusion, old hydraulics whining under stress. He didn't care. He sprinted through the narrow corridor, past exposed wiring and flickering panels, until he slid into the pilot's seat. The controls looked half-forgotten, patched with mismatched parts and held together by stubbornness.
Ace wasn't a pilot, he knew enough to fly, barely. But "barely" was going to have to be good enough. Fingers flying across switches, he muttered under his breath, trying to recall everything Mira ever barked at him during repair jobs. Systems coughed to life. Repulsors buzzed. Lights flickered green. That was either a good sign or a bad one, he'd figure it out in the sky.
