The woman's easy grin vanished, her cavalier attitude souring so quickly and so clearly that even without the Force Valephor would have been able to feel the offense rolling off of her in waves. Somehow, with a few short words and a bow, he'd erased any positive inclination she'd had for him, and replaced it with derision and hate.
His blood was ice in his veins, seeking to match its temperature with the frozen world. The woman told him to call her 'Boss', a title that he associated with Captain Morra back on the
Delight, but the quick change in emotion reminded him more of his mother.
'Oh dear,' he thought, mind fraught with worry.
'Oh golly gee. At least I know she doesn't have a skarsong.' The raised patterns of his tattoos ached with memory, each one a mark of failure. He'd only had one before the accident. Now they crisscrossed his body in ritual fashion.
He much prefered Captain Morra's lash.
The apostate was still realiing from his mistake when she turned and started walking. He hurried to follow her, falling in line on instinct and making sure not to walk too closely. "Yes Boss Tane. It won't happen again, Boss Tane."
He peered from beneath his hood at the beings she had indicated. They leered at him from around the launchpad, postures closed off even as their lips moved, indicating a conversation he couldn't hope to hear.
'Oh goodness gracious,' he fretted, doing his best to give them all quick bows even as he moved.
'Oh mercy me. Oh heaven's to betsy.'
He tried not to seem too happy at the mention of a Code. It sounded like a lifeline to him. It had been so hard, learning what the crew of the
Delight wanted from him. It felt like he broke some unwritten law three times a day. If he hadn't known any better, he would have thought they were tricking him. But a set of rules would lay things out. Oh he'd memorize it by heart. Long as he could read it. His aurabesh still wasn't so good. Didn't need it, the crew had told him. But he'd wanted to learn all the same.
Still, she'd mentioned the Code
last, which meant there was a chance it would be received last as well. Right now, if given the choice, he pick rules over food. Rules meant knowing what he needed to do to avoid punishment. And as poor quality as the cybernetic in his throat might have been, he'd prefer to keep the privilege of breathing.
So he took a deep breath, his throat whirring to accommodate it, and bowed his head, making sure not to suggest he was looking the woman in the eyes this time. "T-this one has angered Gracious Boss Tane in its ignorance, and is ashamed of its failure. This one seeks correction, and obediently awaits punishment," he began, his voice thrumming with the cybernetic's electronic whine. Presumably, the woman was angry because he'd failed to show proper deference to her 'boss' caste, and so he increased the formality. "This one requests for the Code to be provided after. If only it could examine the Code, this one would gladly rectify its deficiencies-"
At that moment, a being stepped into his view, a combination of intricate robes and vibrant green leaves. Even though he wasn't focusing on it, his Life Sense told him there was something
special about this sentient, enough that despite himself, his eyes walked up her body. And up. And up.
And up.
"Oh Force within us," he breathed, his gasp both entirely involuntary and horribly embarrassing. While he'd never seen a tree in real life, he still knew what one was supposed to look like, and this woman was definitely a tree. A simple word 'tree', yet it could not convey his wonder in that moment. The vibrant green of her leaves, the smooth texture of her reddish-brown bark, the absolutely gorgeous teal of her glowing eyes.
There was just something uniquely magical about his first tree being the most beautiful woman he'd ever seen. Or perhaps it was
because she was his first tree that she seemed so beautiful. He didn't really have much to compare the experience to. He just knew she was exquisite in a way he hadn't known a being was capable of.
Unconsciously, his Life Sense flared, something he'd suppressed to deal with his confinement in the walls of those dead things they called ships. The bacteria in the air was reassuring in its presence, like a warm filter that surrounded him. Boss Tane was at least mostly human, that much he could sense, but there was more with which he was unfamiliar. He also felt her cybernetic, or rather the lack of life where her arm was. Tainted, much like him. And- goodness gracious, when was the last time she'd washed behind her ears?
He could feel the others as well. Their unique biologies even more distinct to him than their faces. There was a weird, person-shaped hole in the ever-present bio-film on top of one of the buildings- even more dead than the metal and glass, if that was even possible. Dead-tech at least had stuff living on it, even if it was thinner in a ship. He could sense every wire in every wall by the microfauna that lived on it. Not so with the hole. Perhaps it was some kind of statue made from a substance with anti-microbial properties? His eyes flicked up to check, but whatever it was, he couldn't see it from his position.
More importantly though, the tree-woman- well she was life in a way he had never felt before. Old too. Much much older than she looked. He couldn't tell how old, but certainly the oldest person he'd ever met. If he had the time and she stayed still enough, he might have been able to use Life Sense to count her rings, but not here and now. Her cells were entirely different from an animal's, yet their structure implied a shifting elasticity all the same. His cheeks flushed as he imagined the kind of
control she must have had over her form.
Every sapient was an ecosystem, their own cells outnumbered by symbiotic micro-organisms, but there were still commonalities. Not so with her. In a reversal of most animals, fungi grew along the roots of her leaves, while mites lived within her digestive tract, breaking down waste products and converting them into something useful. With the efficiency he saw there, she could likely sustain herself on nothing more than dew and sunlight, as pure a creature as there ever was. He doubt she even needed to breath more than once an hour, if that.
His excitement doubled as he sensed she held a biot at her waist. Blaster shaped, but clearly the complex, engineered biology of a miniturized Yaret-Kor. Er, well, roughly based on it anyway. Actually, perhaps it was merely a case of convergent evolution? He was being presumptious again. The point was, it was proof outsider technology could be used to engineer biots just as he'd predicted. Or at least modify them.
It was better too. Far better. The genius part was how the mycellium network within functioned akin to neurons, creating positive and negative differences through manipulation of ionic electrolytes. The same mechanics as firing synapses, but turbocharged to the extent they created a powerful and more importantly
precise magnetic field through purely organic process. This meant it's mechanism was something between a blaster and a slugthrower, the magnetic fields used to compress a sporific propellant into plasma, which then cradled a non-magnetic projectile, and allowed it to be accelerated to immense speeds. And if even a percent of those pseudo-neurons were devoted to processing power, then the item was quite intelligent as well.
Fascinating.
But the piece de la resistance was undoubtedly the core of power he sensed within her chest. His eye locked on, as if it could see it through her bark, but there was no such luck. It was part of her, but also not. An organic implant that had been incorporated into her form, pulsing with vibrant life. How exciting! The Living Path had access to such things, but they were a great investment of resources. Technically, an outsider possessing one was sacrilege of the highest order and he had a duty to ritually execute the infidel for stealing such an important biot, but if he were following tradition, he'd have to kill everyone on the planet and then himself- or die trying. And he didn't want to die.
No, much more exciting was the idea that this was
not a biot of the Living Path, but something else entirely. Oh no, what was he thinking? Of
course this was outsider technology! The woman's biology would be incompatible with their implants, and it was clearly plant based besides- something wildly different. If he hadn't been utterly enraptured by the woman's exotic beauty, this alone would have stolen every ounce of focus he had. As it was, taken together, he could have died from sheer exitement, his expression growing more gobsmacked with every passing moment as his thoughts jumbled together.
"You have a magnificent vascular system," He said, his whole face burning the moment the words escaped his lips. Without delay he bowed his head again, cursing his lack of restraint. Even now he could barely prevent himself from studying her.
Kriffing hells but he never wanted to stop.
OPEN