TAG:
Malachi Vokat
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Cordelia Malkavian
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Runi Kuryida
Adean's shoulders rose briefly, though if it was more out of nonchalance or being unused to praise was anybody's guess. "
It's a big galaxy. Standardizations get tricky."
The redhead's words gave her a pause, the reassurance unexpected and apparently a mutual thought, judging from the slight glance from their circumstantial leader. "
Kind of you to say." Adean didn't know how else to respond. They weren't exactly close, they hadn't even exchanged names at this juncture. Her words were also almost a direct contrast to the teachings Adean had endured in the past months. Not bad, just different. "
We'll see if it plays out."
As Vokat picked up his pace, so too did Adean. Where the other two were built and trained for combat, the acolyte's frame was one that more
suggested athleticism than actively engaged in it. She was tall, but not so much so that it was actively noticed - more of a surprise revelation one would discover or rediscover in close quarters. Yet she was also not weighed down by armor, her tunic being form-fitting in the practical sense.
They rounded upon a bizarre scene of floating wreckage. With feet planted and arms raised, it was no terrible feat to identify Runi as the one responsible for the floating masses. Adean's eyes widened at the sight. Some wreckage had been anticipated from the sound, but not this volume. Already, Vokat stepped in, moving to free a worker from their pinned position.
Adean tried to move, tried to at least identify the best course of action to pull others from their workplace tombs. Her boots remained glued to the temporary flooring beneath them, her eyes locked on the durasteel beams above, breath caught in her throat.
It was just like the lab.
It's not just like the lab, the lab was underground.
It's going to be just like the lab.
Words were beyond the Epicanthix who stared down the soon-to-be death traps with eyes like saucers. Sawdust and debris were already gathering around them by virtue of being a construction zone. Surely it was only a matter of time before they were all buried. Her ears were deaf to all but the erratic pounding in her chest, in her head. That is, until one word soared above the rest, propelled by its urgency.
'Please.'
She snapped back to attention, still finding her legs unable or unwilling to move. Her eyes worked just fine, however, glancing at Vokat and then catching another downed worker on the periphery. As if propelled by a subconscious instinct, a lead-stained hand reached out in the direction of the worker before wrenching backward with a surge of force, as if to drag the worker from harm.
She could only hope Cordelia was having a better time of things.