Mirra Voss
Too weird to live, too rare to die!

Smogfall
The Caves, Efavan
"Smogfall, verb - Slang used by dwellers of the lower layers of Efavan to refer to someone or something falling from above, usually with unsuccessful, dangerous or fatal connotations."
Long data-conduits fall from the tangle of wires and scrap that formed the roof of the shanty in a rough circle around the center of the larger of the two rooms within.
A flicker of motion, blue and white against a grimy wall. Eyes try to track the target, my hand grips the blaster tighter. There, no, th...
Glittering green and purple neon lights flicker into life and then fall dark again in time to the pathetic chugging of an ancient smoke machine, both of them on a faulty timer circuit the owner simply had not been able to fix.
No blood. How could there be no blood? Five gang bravos dead, some of them missing limbs, all of them with surprised looks on their faces. An alien figure walks away into the darkness.
The dark lenses of last decades state of the art holoprojector units reflected the dull, empty room, as black and empty as a Hutt's heart.
My heart beats faster, a terrified hammering that drowns out all the sound in my world. This just a dream. They're all just dreams. None of them are real... only...
Cheap theatrics for an even cheaper audience.
There it is, a blur of white and blue filled with disgust and deeply repressed anger. The world around it seems almost tranquil, without emotion. It's features are still as it kills men and women like the reaper itself. A devil birthed from the Force.
Sweat stained the tiny cot in the second room, the sole contents aside from this years state of the art, stolen Slicer deck, the cables still held in the sleeping hand of the eyeless figure who tossed and turned as if physically assaulted in her dreams. A wordless cry leaves her lips, but she does not wake.
Deeper now, into the smog that is the roof of the world above this one. They say the world above that has sky, but I have never seen it, not even with my sight. I have dreamt it, it holds terrors. Terrors like this demon which now haunts the worlds above. Descending.
The room has almost no floor, just a tangle of pipes above the drop to the water of the Sinks below. Safety precaution. No one would break in here. They say the Oracle will see it coming in the data, anyway. They're half right.
Further now - a trail of bodies from those who get in her way, criminals, muggers and thieves all. But isn't that all there is in this city? Good people live in the Spires. Well, rich people, anyway. I've dreamt of their sins as well. I know their names, their faces, their weaknesses. I was too good. Too lucky. They saw through the act. Oh. No.
Above the bed, a long line of bottles of neon liquids, some half empty, some full sits like a mute testament to abuse. A final judgement of the woman who stirs restlessly in the bed of herself.
It's coming here. Below sky, below smog, below earth - the caves, then the sinks. Here. For me.

Mirra awoke with a scream, this was nothing unusual, her hand flew out, groping for one of the flasks above her bed as her heart thudded so hard in her chest. She needed the one that worked, but she couldn't see that one, her hand caught it and she felt rather than saw the splash of liquid across her chest, decorating her with a neon fluid she couldn't see with her sight, then a tinkle of glass. After a moment, she sullenly activated the optics in her mask, backup, her father had always said. You couldn't rely on the Sight, it lied to you.
Mirra knew it told only the truth, which is why she had that bottle. It was the only thing that truly let her sleep, her chem-addled body almost immune to everything else.
Yes. A bright neon stain ran across the dark, rumbled jumpsuit that passed for clothing she'd fallen asleep in, and she was still here, a girl just on the cusp of adulthood, with no future and nowhere further to fall, limbs weak from mild malnutrition and replacement of needed nutrients with stims and sedatives in alternative doses. The shakes were already starting to set in, and she grabbed one of the green and blue bottles and greedily drank it, a trickle of neon staining her lips.
Nowhere to fall, but she needed to run. Now. They all needed to run, she'd finally come to the end of the line. A demon from the Force was coming to take her away. Just like had happened to Maris.
Maris had been a selfish chit, but she'd sort of been a friend to the Nexu. Mirra had tried to warn the girl, but she was cocky and Marris was secretly terrified of her. She hadn't pushed hard enough that the girl was pushing too hard. Now Maris was dead, or worse, taken by whatever devils the Dark Lords summon to pluck servants from the earth.
There were no angels in heaven. Mirra would have seen them. She always saw the truth.
Up and out, no time to stop, no time to think. Grab your go-bag (thanks dad!), grab your 'deck and get out, now, emerging into the noisy confusion and dark, murky grandure of the Caves. Whole villages sat at the base of the spires, fishing junk and stealing from the water supplies of the rich like cockroaches at a banquet. Whole towns, whole economies of junk and filth spiralled their way up the columns that supported the roof of this world.
The lowest world. The Underworld, some called it.
Outside, a dark-skinned woman with bright neon lips and a brilliant neon tribal tattoo - and no clothes that could be seen - startled up and drew a cheap hold out blaster from nowhere. Mirra made the hurried sign of cross - Crosstown, her home, what passed for a brilliant light of civilisation in this part of the galaxy. What a joke. Mirra might have laughed, if she had anything to laugh about. But above, one of the rattling gantry cages descended to the towns main elevator port. Mirra stared, did demons use elevators?
No matter. She had to run, even if she didn't know where she was going to run to. Away, and... down, only the desperate came this far down, only those with a death wish - or death mark - went deeper, into the Scraps.
Mirra might have cried, if she had tear ducts, she thought she'd long ago given up cursing the galaxy for being unfair. It turns out, she still had a little disappointment in it left in her. Down, then - along a rickety alley high above the dizzying drop, winding her way towards the bottom of Crossroads. Then she'd have to take a risk and take an elevator car, or climb.
[member="Tia'Ilandra Shaasa"]