Smooth Criminal
You've been hit by... you've been struck by...
Kinley Pryse doesn't fear death. She's just waiting for Death to make a better offer.
Kinley Pryse didn't like being this close to Imperial territory. It made her feel… itchy. Not the kind of itch you scratched with a quick shift of your jacket or a tug at your collar, this one crawled under the skin and settled somewhere behind the ribs. The Empire had a way of doing that. Too many checkpoints, too many gray uniforms, too many officers with nothing better to do than ruin someone's day for sport.
Lothal was crawling with them.
Every landing platform had a squad of stormtroopers pretending they weren't bored. Every street had surveillance poles blinking red like watchful eyes. Even the air felt different, sterile, controlled, like the whole planet had been scrubbed clean and labeled property of the Empire.
Kinley hated it.
Unfortunately, her boss didn't care.
Flint had sent her here with a job, a vague briefing, and the promise that a crew would be provided. Flint's promises were always delivered with that same irritating confidence, like the galaxy itself would bend over backwards to make sure his plans worked out. Sometimes it did. Sometimes it very much didn't.
Kinley had learned the hard way that when Flint said don't worry about it, I've got people, it usually meant she'd be working with smugglers who couldn't shoot straight, mercenaries who drank more than they fought, or slicers who panicked the second an Imperial firewall sneezed in their direction.
Which was why she was sitting in this cantina.
The place wasn't terrible, as far as Imperial worlds went. Dim lighting. Sticky tables. A band in the corner doing their best to murder a popular Core Worlds tune. The air smelled like cheap ale, fried nuna, and the faint ozone scent of overheated blasters that had seen one too many arguments.
Kinley leaned back in her chair, boots propped casually on the rung of the opposite stool, toothpick rolling lazily from one side of her mouth to the other. Her hat rested low over her eyes, but that didn't mean she wasn't watching everything.
Because she always was.
The door slid open every few minutes with a mechanical hiss, letting in another wave of patrons like dockworkers, traders, the occasional Imperial officer trying to pretend he wasn't slumming it for information. Each time it opened, Kinley glanced up just enough to take stock.
Too clean.
Too nervous.
Too drunk.
Definitely a snitch.
So far, Flint's promised "crew" looked suspiciously like nobody.
She checked the chrono on the wall again and clicked her tongue softly.
"Fantastic," she muttered around the toothpick. "Flint sends me to the most Imperial-infested rock this side of Coruscant and my crew's already late. Real professional operation we're running."
A serving droid clanked past and she lifted two fingers lazily. The droid beeped and sat down another of the mocktails she had been sipping. It looked like something strong enough to make her forget she was on Lothal but it had no alcohol content. It was a prop like most of the things in her life, because the swagger was the only thing that kept her alive at times.
Another hiss from the door.
Kinley's eyes flicked up again, sharp and quick despite her relaxed posture. Maybe this time it would be someone useful.
Or maybe, as usual, Flint had scraped the bottom of the galactic barrel and sent her whatever fell out.
Either way, she figured she'd know in about five seconds.
A Smooth Criminal