Cyberjunk
//Denon
//we always on Denon…
//we always on Denon…
The coffee table was covered in metal.
Tools were scattered over the lacquered wood surface, interspersed with lengths of wire and parts that had been scrapped from other projects. Sitting cross-legged on the floor, the barefoot Zeltron was hunched over her latest project. Something smaller, more delicate than the prosthetics she’d engineered in the past. Something more sophisticated, something that required a more refined skill set than what she had.
A replacement eye for the one that had been taken by Zaavik.
Ever since moving her business to Denon, Yula’s days were filled with boosting speeders, repairing vehicles, and re-designing components for her production droids. When Dag was around, they’d meet in the evening for dinner and a holo, if their mismatched schedules could afford it. Occasionally they’d work the same job and collapse in an exhausted heap on the couch. Even as darkness spilled across the dregs of the city-planet like ink, it was easy to keep the fire burning between them. Sometimes, that darkness would creep into the life they lived together.
Dag had been away for four days. He’d be at least a week on Coruscant, this time—maybe more, he didn’t know yet, but when he did he’d let her know. Yula was used to it. Didn’t mean that she didn’t miss him—she always did—but she had enough work to keep herself busy. Beyond that, there was usually something interesting going on between the Shadowrunners to keep her occupied.
The replacement eye was proving even trickier than she’d imagined. After some trial and error, she’d managed to get the basic concept of mechanical limbs into a usable state, starting with Kyra’s arm. But the eye… you couldn’t use servos on something this small and fragile. At least not in a way Yula knew how.
“Tsk-!” Her lips pulled back against her teeth, hang jerking away as she’d grazed the wrong wire with the tip of the soldering iron. Sparks eked from the tiny device, and she cursed the instrument she was using instead of her own hand. What she needed was a smaller adapter that would enable her to perform the intricate work that went into building an ocular implant.
If Dag had been here, he’d have pulled her from the coffee table and out of the apartment. A walk for some fresh air, maybe a trip to one of their favorite takeaways. She’d done the same for him plenty of times when he’d fallen too deeply into his crime charts, forcing him to eat, sleep, or focus on something other than the mess of poster board and string she’d moved to the garage.
Her legs unfolded, prepare to rise and retrieve the kit of interchangeable tips before she stopped short. Cupped in her hands, the faux eye stared back at her. This was the furthest she’d gotten on her many attempts, and the outer casing of the eye looked nearly identical to the real thing. Although the inner working left a lot to be desired, the design was striking. A shade of green, somewhere between emerald and olive, gazed at her. In the silence of the apartment, she saw anger reflected in the green iris.
Mocking anger.
And then, disappointment in its unblinking gaze. Instead of fixing the root of the problem, she was once again trying to cover this one with a band-aid—a faux organ, a solution that wasn’t really a solution, and certainly one that she didn’t deserve.
In Zaavik, she had been too little, too late. With Kyra and Nida, she hadn’t even tried. And where she did try, failure followed. Her selfishness had already taken its toll, condemning her to a life of disappointing others like a black mark.
The eyeball shattered in a crash of glass and metallic viscera against the floor.
Her thoughts were slipping into a dark place, a place where Yula knew it wasn’t good for her to be alone. Dagon was away, but she knew something else that could soothe it. Padding over broken glass, Yula made her way to the bedroom closet. Boxes and clothes were pushed aside as she dug towards the back, then jimmied open a loose floorboard in the corner. A bag and a needle. He wouldn’t be home for at least three more days. He wouldn’t know.
She’d never tell him.
It hit her harder, quicker, better than usual. Being clean for months and losing your tolerance did that, and the shame of relapsing melted into nothingness. Yula settled back into the couch and sighed, arm going limp and releasing the needle onto the floor. It didn’t make everything right with the world, but her problems were on the periphery instead of front and center, staring her in the eye.
