Forcebound Rebel


Location: Naboo - Theed
The Flickerfox came in low over Theed's spires, its paint-scarred hull cutting a crooked silhouette against skies too bright and too clean for his liking. Naboo looked like something out of a dream. Waterfalls, glassy lakes, stone streets polished enough to see your reflection in. People like him didn't belong in places like this.
The ship touched down at the spaceport with a hiss and the ramp clanged open. Ace lingered at the top for a second, shoulders squared but jaw tight. Naboo was beautiful, sure. It was also the kind of beautiful that made him feel dirty just for standing in it.
Tic chirped at his heel, scampering forward until the little droid paused at the sunlight beyond. A flicker of static cut across its lens as it tilted its head back at him, questioning. Ace smirked faintly and crouched to tap its dented casing.
"Yeah, I know. Don't look at me like that. I don't belong here either."
For once there wasn't blasterfire waiting, no lightsabers lit, no mad scramble for survival. Just stillness. He'd been getting more of that recently, and he still didn't know what to do with it. It left him awkward, like he was supposed to be doing something still.
Then he remembered why he'd come.
Sibylla Abrantes
. His chest gave this weird little kick, and for half a second his stomach flipped. Butterflies? Ace blinked, rubbed at the back of his neck, and immediately scowled at himself. He'd fought stormtroopers, bounty hunters, even gone blade-to-blade with a Sith Lord. He didn't flinch a single time then. But one Naboo noble and suddenly he was nervous? Ridiculous.
He blew out a breath, squared his shoulders, and started down the ramp. Time to find her.
The ship touched down at the spaceport with a hiss and the ramp clanged open. Ace lingered at the top for a second, shoulders squared but jaw tight. Naboo was beautiful, sure. It was also the kind of beautiful that made him feel dirty just for standing in it.
Tic chirped at his heel, scampering forward until the little droid paused at the sunlight beyond. A flicker of static cut across its lens as it tilted its head back at him, questioning. Ace smirked faintly and crouched to tap its dented casing.
"Yeah, I know. Don't look at me like that. I don't belong here either."
For once there wasn't blasterfire waiting, no lightsabers lit, no mad scramble for survival. Just stillness. He'd been getting more of that recently, and he still didn't know what to do with it. It left him awkward, like he was supposed to be doing something still.
Then he remembered why he'd come.

He blew out a breath, squared his shoulders, and started down the ramp. Time to find her.