Mother of Pearl
Busting a slaver ring typically didn’t go like it did in the holoflicks. Okay, maybe things were pretty similar for a handful of collective minutes, but what those flicks left out was the weeks and weeks of casing you had to do. The hours upon hours of sifting through images and testimonies, most of which never turned out to be useful. In that way, the work was grueling and exhausting before you ever got to the action. If you managed to get to the action. Sometimes things didn’t go right and you had to abandon your mission, pull out if things were going south before you even started. Picking the right battles was a tedious thing to do, and sometimes you had to watch as a shipment of frightened children slipped out into the galaxy for an unknown destination.
Following them would be too stupid, you’d get caught and expose the whole thing. Maybe you’d die, maybe your friends would die too. And it wouldn’t be worth it, because heroism lead to an overinflated sense of self and stupid mistakes. Life wasn’t like the holoflicks.
If it was, she’d have chosen a different genre.
One where she wasn’t being shot at, preferably, but this was her life and that was that. “Ivan, you nerf herder. Where are you?” She practically spat into the comm embedded into her helmet as she rounded a corner, taking up the rear of a group of frightened and retreating slaves. The bust hadn’t gone quite the way she wanted it to, which was stealthy and quiet. Instead there had been some sort of explosion, and Joza had elected to get the slaves—preteen girls—moving on foot towards where she thought Ivan would be with a nondescript corvette. “Oh, wait. I see you.” She’d apologize later, maybe, but right now she was focused on the thugs closing in. A few bolts of plasma sizzled against the narrow permacrete corridor. “Zig-zag pattern, ladies!” She grunted out, though the terrified girls likely had no idea what the hell she was talking about.
She hadn’t come alone—a handful of her snipers had been trained in infiltration and usually came along with her on these sorts of things. The photo-optic armor helped with sneaking around, but not so much this time. They lead the fleeing group as Joza did her best to hold them off, Zef’s gunslinging blood unknowingly coming in handy.
“Hurry it up!” She hissed as the slaves, exhausted but largely unharmed, were ushered into the cargo bay of the ship. The Zeltron would follow eventually, not too keen on sticking around and getting gunned down given that she was outnumbered.
Okay, so it was a little like a holoflick.
[member="Elliot Locke"]
Following them would be too stupid, you’d get caught and expose the whole thing. Maybe you’d die, maybe your friends would die too. And it wouldn’t be worth it, because heroism lead to an overinflated sense of self and stupid mistakes. Life wasn’t like the holoflicks.
If it was, she’d have chosen a different genre.
One where she wasn’t being shot at, preferably, but this was her life and that was that. “Ivan, you nerf herder. Where are you?” She practically spat into the comm embedded into her helmet as she rounded a corner, taking up the rear of a group of frightened and retreating slaves. The bust hadn’t gone quite the way she wanted it to, which was stealthy and quiet. Instead there had been some sort of explosion, and Joza had elected to get the slaves—preteen girls—moving on foot towards where she thought Ivan would be with a nondescript corvette. “Oh, wait. I see you.” She’d apologize later, maybe, but right now she was focused on the thugs closing in. A few bolts of plasma sizzled against the narrow permacrete corridor. “Zig-zag pattern, ladies!” She grunted out, though the terrified girls likely had no idea what the hell she was talking about.
She hadn’t come alone—a handful of her snipers had been trained in infiltration and usually came along with her on these sorts of things. The photo-optic armor helped with sneaking around, but not so much this time. They lead the fleeing group as Joza did her best to hold them off, Zef’s gunslinging blood unknowingly coming in handy.
“Hurry it up!” She hissed as the slaves, exhausted but largely unharmed, were ushered into the cargo bay of the ship. The Zeltron would follow eventually, not too keen on sticking around and getting gunned down given that she was outnumbered.
Okay, so it was a little like a holoflick.
[member="Elliot Locke"]