Digital Shadow
The panel had been stripped down to its bones.
Aren crouched beside the open access housing with a small light clipped to the edge of the bulkhead, its cool white glow spilling over the exposed circuitry. The outer casing of the generator lay in careful pieces beside her, every bolt and plate arranged in neat rows on a cloth she had spread across the durasteel floor. Anyone else might have seen a mess of wires and scorched components. To her, it was a conversation waiting to be finished.
The station's maintenance logs had been vague.
Intermittent power drops. Systems rebooting at random intervals. Nothing catastrophic, which meant no one had bothered fixing it properly. They had simply reset the grid and hoped it behaved long enough to avoid paperwork.
Typical.
Aren adjusted the small driver in her hand and loosened another panel from the regulator housing, setting it aside with the same quiet precision she applied to everything else. The smell of burnt insulation lingered faintly in the air, confirming what she had suspected the moment she opened the unit.
Not sabotage. Neglect.
The power coupler had been running hot for months, maybe longer, until the shielding finally started to degrade. Someone had attempted a repair at some point, judging by the uneven weld along one of the conduits, but the work had been rushed and sloppy.
She exhaled slowly.
"Of course," she murmured to no one in particular.
Her fingers moved through the components with practiced familiarity, tracing the path of damage through the circuitry while her mind quietly rebuilt the system in layers of possibility. Replace the coupler. Reinforce the shielding. Realign the grid so the stress was redistributed across the secondary relay instead of concentrating in a single node.
Simple. If it had been done the first time correctly.
Aren reached for the tool case beside her and retrieved a replacement coupler from its foam slot, turning it once in her fingers before leaning back toward the open generator. As she worked, the rest of the station carried on around her—distant voices from the docking corridor, the occasional rumble of a freighter settling onto landing clamps, the low ambient hum of a place that never truly slept.
None of it distracted her.
Her focus remained on the exposed machinery in front of her, the quiet rhythm of repair settling into place as naturally as breathing.
Somewhere nearby, heavier footsteps echoed through the corridor. Aren did not look up. If whoever was approaching needed something, they would say so. Until then, the generator remained the more interesting problem.
Rolcor Wildstar
Aren crouched beside the open access housing with a small light clipped to the edge of the bulkhead, its cool white glow spilling over the exposed circuitry. The outer casing of the generator lay in careful pieces beside her, every bolt and plate arranged in neat rows on a cloth she had spread across the durasteel floor. Anyone else might have seen a mess of wires and scorched components. To her, it was a conversation waiting to be finished.
The station's maintenance logs had been vague.
Intermittent power drops. Systems rebooting at random intervals. Nothing catastrophic, which meant no one had bothered fixing it properly. They had simply reset the grid and hoped it behaved long enough to avoid paperwork.
Typical.
Aren adjusted the small driver in her hand and loosened another panel from the regulator housing, setting it aside with the same quiet precision she applied to everything else. The smell of burnt insulation lingered faintly in the air, confirming what she had suspected the moment she opened the unit.
Not sabotage. Neglect.
The power coupler had been running hot for months, maybe longer, until the shielding finally started to degrade. Someone had attempted a repair at some point, judging by the uneven weld along one of the conduits, but the work had been rushed and sloppy.
She exhaled slowly.
"Of course," she murmured to no one in particular.
Her fingers moved through the components with practiced familiarity, tracing the path of damage through the circuitry while her mind quietly rebuilt the system in layers of possibility. Replace the coupler. Reinforce the shielding. Realign the grid so the stress was redistributed across the secondary relay instead of concentrating in a single node.
Simple. If it had been done the first time correctly.
Aren reached for the tool case beside her and retrieved a replacement coupler from its foam slot, turning it once in her fingers before leaning back toward the open generator. As she worked, the rest of the station carried on around her—distant voices from the docking corridor, the occasional rumble of a freighter settling onto landing clamps, the low ambient hum of a place that never truly slept.
None of it distracted her.
Her focus remained on the exposed machinery in front of her, the quiet rhythm of repair settling into place as naturally as breathing.
Somewhere nearby, heavier footsteps echoed through the corridor. Aren did not look up. If whoever was approaching needed something, they would say so. Until then, the generator remained the more interesting problem.