Deanez
Dean
The air on Gravlex Med carried weight.
Not the crushing gravity of a gas giant's pull, but the layered pressure of commerce, bodies, and machinery all competing for space within the sprawling market corridors. Heat rose in uneven currents from exposed power couplings and portable generators, mingling with the sharper scents of lubricants, ion residue, and spiced street food cooked on open grills that had clearly seen better centuries.
Dean moved through it all with measured ease.
She wore civilian clothing. Functional, neutral, deliberately unremarkable. But her posture remained unmistakable. Back straight. Steps precise. Awareness radiating outward without strain. She let the crowd flow around her rather than pushing through it, crimson eyes flicking calmly from stall to stall as vendors shouted prices in half a dozen languages and droids rattled past with crates too large for their frames.
Gravlex Med was not a place that pretended to be clean or orderly. It was a world that survived by adaptation. Salvage, refit, resale. Nothing here was pristine, but very little was useless.
Which made it ideal.
Ahead of her, Rynar had already slowed near a cluster of mechanical stalls where disassembled components hung from cables like metal organs. Power regulators. Coolant manifolds. Shield couplers in varying states of repair. He did not speak yet, but she recognized the shift in his gait, the way his attention narrowed and sharpened as he began cataloging options instinctively, eyes scanning for compatibility, wear patterns, hidden flaws.
Dean let him drift that way without comment.
She angled instead toward the opposite side of the thoroughfare, where the market softened—not safer, but quieter. Fabric awnings instead of exposed wiring. Crates of Duraplast cookware. Folded textiles meant for ships, modular and compact. Lighting fixtures designed to run off minimal draw. Small, practical things that turned empty rooms into livable spaces.
She paused at a stall displaying collapsible storage units, running her fingers lightly along the seam of one. Durable. Easy to secure. Not decorative, nor sterile.
A ship could survive without these things. A home could not.
She glanced back toward Rynar, just long enough to confirm his position among the machinery, then returned her attention to the vendor, already weighing size constraints against available cargo space, mentally placing objects into rooms that had only recently stopped being empty.
Gravlex Med buzzed around them—voices overlapping, credits changing hands, deals struck and broken in the span of a breath—but for the moment, Dean felt no urgency to move quickly.
They were not running.
They were choosing.
And this market, chaotic and imperfect as it was, would help them finish turning a ship into something that could be lived in.
Rynar Solde
Not the crushing gravity of a gas giant's pull, but the layered pressure of commerce, bodies, and machinery all competing for space within the sprawling market corridors. Heat rose in uneven currents from exposed power couplings and portable generators, mingling with the sharper scents of lubricants, ion residue, and spiced street food cooked on open grills that had clearly seen better centuries.
Dean moved through it all with measured ease.
She wore civilian clothing. Functional, neutral, deliberately unremarkable. But her posture remained unmistakable. Back straight. Steps precise. Awareness radiating outward without strain. She let the crowd flow around her rather than pushing through it, crimson eyes flicking calmly from stall to stall as vendors shouted prices in half a dozen languages and droids rattled past with crates too large for their frames.
Gravlex Med was not a place that pretended to be clean or orderly. It was a world that survived by adaptation. Salvage, refit, resale. Nothing here was pristine, but very little was useless.
Which made it ideal.
Ahead of her, Rynar had already slowed near a cluster of mechanical stalls where disassembled components hung from cables like metal organs. Power regulators. Coolant manifolds. Shield couplers in varying states of repair. He did not speak yet, but she recognized the shift in his gait, the way his attention narrowed and sharpened as he began cataloging options instinctively, eyes scanning for compatibility, wear patterns, hidden flaws.
Dean let him drift that way without comment.
She angled instead toward the opposite side of the thoroughfare, where the market softened—not safer, but quieter. Fabric awnings instead of exposed wiring. Crates of Duraplast cookware. Folded textiles meant for ships, modular and compact. Lighting fixtures designed to run off minimal draw. Small, practical things that turned empty rooms into livable spaces.
She paused at a stall displaying collapsible storage units, running her fingers lightly along the seam of one. Durable. Easy to secure. Not decorative, nor sterile.
A ship could survive without these things. A home could not.
She glanced back toward Rynar, just long enough to confirm his position among the machinery, then returned her attention to the vendor, already weighing size constraints against available cargo space, mentally placing objects into rooms that had only recently stopped being empty.
Gravlex Med buzzed around them—voices overlapping, credits changing hands, deals struck and broken in the span of a breath—but for the moment, Dean felt no urgency to move quickly.
They were not running.
They were choosing.
And this market, chaotic and imperfect as it was, would help them finish turning a ship into something that could be lived in.