Mirae Rystar
Character
"C'mon you freebirth scum! Load! Load the stravag batteries! Load! Load!"
Hands reached towards the forward magazines, the trembling fingers wrapping around the energy shells. The shells were heavy. Probably too heavy for the hands. But the hands had forgotten what heavy meant, had forgotten ages ago. Maybe not ages, but it seemed like ages. The hands couldn't remember when they had forgotten. Perhaps they had never known what heavy was, and the weight of the shells was normal. The rounds were not heavy.
The hands dragged those energy rounds, capsules of deadly cargo, dragged them to the hulking breech as instructed. The voices screamed around the hands, calling out orders, roaring through the sweltering space. They cursed the hands, they praised the hands, they droned on and on until they bled into the cacophony of noises that made up Weapon Bay Alpha Three of the cruiser Intrepid Bounty.
The hands ignored all of it, and lifted the shell into the breech.
And then the job was done. The shell was gone, loaded and nested safely within Cannon Four. The hands moved away, back to the magazine, just barely aware of the commotion around her as Cannon Four discharged its horrendous cargo.
Back to the magazine. Back to the waiting shells and rounds and ammunition. Back and repeat.
This was the life of the hands. The being to which the hands belonged, the being no longer existed. She had sought to not exist. Why did she exist? Her existence was to support the hands.
And thus she ceased to exist.
The hands. Shells. Cannon fire.
Wait, did she exist? Of course she existed. Otherwise the hands.
The hands. She looked down. At her hands. They were not covered in grime and soot and dirt. They were clean. Calloused but clean.
Her vision wavered. It shimmered, as if she were gazing through a haze of super-heated air. She felt vertigo and nausea, and then it was gone. The world stabilized.
What?
The hands clinched into fists. The hands were connected to scarred wrists. Scars that were fresh and old. She turned her fists over, and the backs were crisscrossed with pale gashes. Some were healed over. Others not.
She looked up. Others. There were others. No weapon master shouting. No Cannon Four belching steam and death and thunder fury.
Someone looked at her and smiled.
She looked down again.
What?
Vertigo. Her vision swam again. And then her hands caught the seat. Stabilizing her.
She blinked. Sighed. And remembered. Fire. Smoke. Flash. Silence.
Nar Shadda. Mission.
Her violet face, remarkably soft and unmarred, smiled. Sharp teeth were bared.
The transport would be touching down soon. And then he would die. Yes. The Hutt would die.
Hands reached towards the forward magazines, the trembling fingers wrapping around the energy shells. The shells were heavy. Probably too heavy for the hands. But the hands had forgotten what heavy meant, had forgotten ages ago. Maybe not ages, but it seemed like ages. The hands couldn't remember when they had forgotten. Perhaps they had never known what heavy was, and the weight of the shells was normal. The rounds were not heavy.
The hands dragged those energy rounds, capsules of deadly cargo, dragged them to the hulking breech as instructed. The voices screamed around the hands, calling out orders, roaring through the sweltering space. They cursed the hands, they praised the hands, they droned on and on until they bled into the cacophony of noises that made up Weapon Bay Alpha Three of the cruiser Intrepid Bounty.
The hands ignored all of it, and lifted the shell into the breech.
And then the job was done. The shell was gone, loaded and nested safely within Cannon Four. The hands moved away, back to the magazine, just barely aware of the commotion around her as Cannon Four discharged its horrendous cargo.
Back to the magazine. Back to the waiting shells and rounds and ammunition. Back and repeat.
This was the life of the hands. The being to which the hands belonged, the being no longer existed. She had sought to not exist. Why did she exist? Her existence was to support the hands.
And thus she ceased to exist.
The hands. Shells. Cannon fire.
Wait, did she exist? Of course she existed. Otherwise the hands.
The hands. She looked down. At her hands. They were not covered in grime and soot and dirt. They were clean. Calloused but clean.
Her vision wavered. It shimmered, as if she were gazing through a haze of super-heated air. She felt vertigo and nausea, and then it was gone. The world stabilized.
What?
The hands clinched into fists. The hands were connected to scarred wrists. Scars that were fresh and old. She turned her fists over, and the backs were crisscrossed with pale gashes. Some were healed over. Others not.
She looked up. Others. There were others. No weapon master shouting. No Cannon Four belching steam and death and thunder fury.
Someone looked at her and smiled.
She looked down again.
What?
Vertigo. Her vision swam again. And then her hands caught the seat. Stabilizing her.
She blinked. Sighed. And remembered. Fire. Smoke. Flash. Silence.
Nar Shadda. Mission.
Her violet face, remarkably soft and unmarred, smiled. Sharp teeth were bared.
The transport would be touching down soon. And then he would die. Yes. The Hutt would die.