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In Hyperspace, No One Can Hear You Scream

Posted: Wed Mar 25, 2026 6:30 pm
by JediTigger
The Corellian freighter Sanaa's Ember is streaking toward Coruscant in the aftermath of a rescue mission that was both a success and a failure. They had indeed freed a kidnapped youth from the clutches of his abductors, well done all around, but they had failed to secure payment after delivering the victim to his family on Tatooine.

Suffice to say that double crosses, Jawa mercenaries and at least one Hutt were involved, and some on the crew likely still suffer from sand in inconvenient places. Worse, here and there are spattered remains of the Rodian who had employed them and was unwisely a participant in the double cross; she had made the mistake of trying to flee to the Ember while the Hutt's guards were opening fire.

Truthfully, everyone getting off Tatooine in one piece should be considered a miracle. As the saying goes, quitting the company of a Hutt with extremities in one piece is a successful negotiation. But empty pockets after a few days' worth of work isn't the best way to survive, particularly when Sindren is left with needed repairs to a few systems and a sanitization of at least the main hold. At least on Coruscant repairs can be made, a few odd jobs can be had, and a small bounty for the Rodian might be attained, if the remnants are proof enough of her demise.

The ship will drop out of hyperspace shortly and find its way to the lower 1300s on Coruscant, where the other sketchy...er, less opulent vehicles dock. In the meantime, maybe getting stories straight in case of inspection is a good idea.

Re: In Hyperspace, No One Can Hear You Scream

Posted: Thu Mar 26, 2026 12:24 am
by Sindren Lorn
The amount of times Sindren had said he'd never take another Tattooine job rivaled the number of mornings he'd woken up saying he wasn't going to drink again. And yet, here he was with more Rodian gore than credits to show for his efforts.

Getting the kid back home was worth it. It was always worth it, but the karking collateral damage was almost enough to make him think twice next time. The burly human bit the inside of his cheek and tried to push away the general annoyance at how things had gone, but then a red light to his right started flashing insistently, demanding his attention

"BD," he growled over the open comm channel broadcasting throughout the Ember, "I'm getting a fault in the sublight stabilizer. Can you get Mana to check it out? If that's acting up when we try to drop out of hyperspace... Just get it fixed before we have to worry about it."

He ran his fingers through his thick salt and pepper hair, massaged his scalp, and closed his eyes releasing a deep breath, sand cascaded from his mane and scattered across the cockpit floor. BD and Mana, they were used to his prickly frankness, but Sindren chose to sugar coat things a bit for the benfit of the others on board.

Kel especially.

That kid.

The hollow feeling, like something had scooped out a portion of his heart and constricted his insides at the same time, hit him again. He'd made a promise to her parents. His jaw clenched as his eyes fell on the tattering string bracelet around his wrist. He'd keep his promise to watch out for her, not like...

He shook his head forcing ancient memories away, eyes drawn back to the unyielding warning light.

"Mana, any time now would be great," he mumbled to himself, trusting she'd handle it. She always did.

Re: In Hyperspace, No One Can Hear You Scream

Posted: Thu Mar 26, 2026 1:30 am
by BD-86
BD-86 was upside down.

Not metaphorically. One spindly leg braced against a bulkhead, the other hooked into a maintenance seam, chassis angled toward an open panel that exposed a nest of wiring that had clearly been “repaired” several times by increasingly desperate hands. However, that wasn’t actually where the droid’s attention was focused. Rather, BD’s photoreceptor softly flickered as he completed a scan of the viscera scattered about on the floor below.

Chirping inquisitively, the droid unhooked itself and landed onto the deck with a soft, metallic clank, carefully navigating between bits of grey matter, limbs, and bone fragments. These pieces once formed a complete rodian, but that was then. Now, they formed a complete mess that was likely to cause problems in the longrun. The last thing they needed was somebody tripping over a disembodied foot, or for bodily fluids to seep down into the wiring and cause a short.

Having taken in the entire grisly scene, BD cocked his head, trying to decide where to begin. He wasn’t going to clean up the blood, but gathering all the “bits” into a pile in the corner would at least be a way to pass the time. A small manipulator was just digging around in the mess, when Sindren’s voice rang out over the intercom:

Sindren Lorn wrote:"BD, I'm getting a fault in the sublight stabilizer. Can you get Mana to check it out? If that's acting up when we try to drop out of hyperspace... Just get it fixed before we have to worry about it."

BD-86 froze mid-motion, still crouched over the remains. Slowly, his head rotated toward the nearest speaker. A short burst of binary followed; flat, unimpressed, and just a touch accusatory. He remained there for exactly half a second longer, as if considering finishing what he had started. Then, with a soft whirr, he straightened, dropping a piece of skull back onto the deck and turning toward an access panel in the wall. Navigating through the corridors would probably have done well enough, but this would be more direct. A brief pulse of his tools, a click, and the panel gave way just enough for him to slip inside.

The ductwork beyond was dark, cramped, and, by most biological standards, unpleasant. BD moved through it with practiced ease, Mag-clamps engaging and disengaging in quick succession as he climbed, turned, and threaded through the narrow passages, his chassis brushing softly against metal that still held the residual warmth of the ship’s systems. The Ember’s internal structure unfolded around him in layers: conduits, cabling, half-patched repairs; familiar in the way only repeated exposure could make them.

Mana liked these spaces. Lived in them, sometimes. If she wasn’t where she was supposed to be, she was here. BD-86 paused at a junction, head tilting as he processed faint audio ahead; steady, slow. Adjusting course, he proceeded toward the sound. The compartment he dropped into was little more than an access space wrapped around the ship’s engine systems; tight, warm, humming with low, constant vibration. Mana was there.

Asleep.

BD dropped down beside her with a soft metallic tap. No immediate reaction. Without ceremony, his holoprojector flickered to life, casting a dim, blue schematic into the space between them. The stabilizer assembly pulsed in sharp red.

[SUBLIGHT STABILIZER: FAULT DETECTED]
[FAILURE PROBABILITY: INCREASING]


The projection hovered, and BD waited.

Nothing.

BD tilted his head slightly, watching her. Another small chirp, this one sharper. More insistent. The schematic flickered once, and a second line appeared beneath it.

[RECOMMENDATION: WAKE UP]

Another chirp, quieter this time. Almost conversational. Mana continued to gently snooze away.

“…”

A moment later, a recording of Sindren’s voice replayed from the droid’s speakers, the volume amped up to a decibel level just shy of a small explosion.
I'M GETTING A FAULT IN THE SUBLIGHT STABILIZER. CAN YOU GET MANA TO CHECK IT OUT?

Re: In Hyperspace, No One Can Hear You Scream

Posted: Thu Mar 26, 2026 4:33 am
by Tessia Sarn
Tessia Sarn is jittery.

Okay, yes. She is always jittery. That's granted.

Tessia Sarn is especially jittery in this particular moment on this particular ship. She paces the crew lounge. Twelve steps aft. Stop. Turn on left heel. Twelve steps in the other direction.

"What do they call the other direction on a ship? Not aft? Forward? That-a-way?" she muses aloud. Her voice is a rapid-fire patter on a good day. This seems to be a less good day. "Ships are stupid. I hate flying. I get space-sick. Is there anything to drink on this bucket of bolts?"

Whether or not anyone is listening to her, Tessia doesn't seem to care much. She's perfectly happy to share her words with everyone or no one.

She tilts her head toward the ceiling. Her battered leather flat cap tries to slide off her head, but she darts a hand up to keep it held in place. Quick reflexes, this one. "Hey, Captain... um..." she calls out, just in case the comm system is open, but she trails off. Why can't she ever remember his name? "Captain... Captain... Sin... Jin? Is there anything to drink on this bu... you-tee-ful ship of yours?"

Tessia drums the fingers of both hands against her thumbs and chews on the side of her lower lip. From the state of the skin around that area, it's a common nervous habit of hers. "Stars and moons, I need a drink."

The job had actually gone okay. She knew a guy. She always "knew a guy", whether said guy was actually a girl, a genderfluid alien or a genderless droid. This guy, however, was indeed a guy. Got them the scoop on the kid they were rescuing from kidnappers. They had kidnapped the kid who had been kidnapped by other kidnappers. Tessia let out a nervous titter at that. That all was great. No one told her they'd have to go to that scorched sand pit to get paid (okay, someone had told her; Tessia hadn't been listening). No one told her, an itinerant resident of any number of the galaxy's megacities, that sand crept in everywhere. And then they hadn't even gotten paid!

And now she's in hyperspace with nothing to drink, a claustrophobia-induced headache starting to chew on her temples, and not even two new credits she can make kiss and hope they multiply.

Tessia frowned as a sudden thought popped into her head. "Wait. Was that my fault?" she says aloud again. "Nah, couldn't have been." It's never her fault. A life motto that keeps her conscience squeaky clean.

Pace. Pace. Pace.

"Are we there yet?" she calls at the ceiling one more time.

Re: In Hyperspace, No One Can Hear You Scream

Posted: Thu Mar 26, 2026 1:44 pm
by Mana Corrick
In this moment, in her little nest in the ship's innards, she looked less like a person and more like a bundle of ratty cloth shoved into whatever space would fit it. The only indication of life was the soft snoring and the steady rise and fall of her chest around the center mass.

She liked tight spaces. Liked the machinery. The cold metal and the steady hum of the engines reminded her of home. The only way she could possibly be more comfortable is if someone cranked up the heat and started banging pots and pans together like the manufacturing plates back on Metalorn. She might even be dreaming of that right now. Of red hot metal being shaped into droids. The sparks of welders and electronics work. The shouts of a hundred different species trying to keep it all running smoothly.
A moment later, a recording of Sindren’s voice replayed from the droid’s speakers, the volume amped up to a decibel level just shy of a small explosion.

I'M GETTING A FAULT IN THE SUBLIGHT STABILIZER. CAN YOU GET MANA TO CHECK IT OUT?
Reality crashes in as one of those shouting voices grows louder than the rest. Big brown eyes snap open, and theres a crash of hard metal on harder skull as she nearly jumps out of her skin and curses in Huttese.

She unfolds herself from her nest of old clothes and dirty rags to glare at BD, scratching at the equally matted nest of brown hair sticking to her head as she tries to shake out the ringing in her ears.

"Mee'm tonka, mee'm tonka," <I'm up, I'm up> she mutters. She slithers out of her little nest, sun-kissed skin and lanky limbs clad in a tank top and pants with too many pockets, her chunky old ring hanging on a length of wire around her neck.

She rubs her head again, hearing, before BD has a chance to reiterate, that something is up with the Sublight Stabilizer. Rubbing a sleep and grease from her eyes, Mana starts crawling through the ship towards the sound like a four-limbed spider patrolling her web. But not before planting her shoe on BD's head assembly and pushing him back a few inches, giggling as she escapes.

Would it be easier to get there from outside the access shafts? Maybe. But Mana is in her element.

It isn't long before she reaches the stabilizer and scoffs at the damage. "Choy? Sa da?" <What is that?> she drawls out, squinting at the rumbling machine before sticking her thin arm into a place no sane organic being would and pulling out a gritty glob of wet sand. "Poodoo!"

She slops it on the ground and dives arms first into the machine, knowing its rhythm like her own heartbeat as she avoids whirring parts and digs debris, blood and unidentifiable vermin parts from its insides.

Tattooine is the worst planet. The absolute worst. And she mutters her displeasure about being on that disgusting sand-ball and the damage its doing to this poor ship all while only her legs are visible from outside of the Sublight Stabilizer.

Re: In Hyperspace, No One Can Hear You Scream

Posted: Thu Mar 26, 2026 7:47 pm
by Kel Hannix
Oh thank the everloving void that they're on a ship again!

Every minute spent on Tattooine was a minute that Kel spent longing to be somewhere else. The desert was terrifyingly blank: just endless stretches of sand and endless hours of sunshine (two suns!!?). Even the buildings were low and squat and sandy, hardly recognizable as buildings at all. It was miserable.

And that was before the job went all to pieces.

Kel had a bad feeling about the Rodian right from the first meeting. She's just nervous because of the high stakes, Kel told herself at the time. That's all.

The spattered bits still clinging to Sindren's ship are just the latest reminder of many of how much Kel needs to remember to trust those bad feelings. It isn't just her insight into people, it's… the Force.

Which is in her. Which is real.

Which is another reason why Tattooine's silence was so disorienting. In that quiet, without Coruscant's eternal thrum of mechanisms and vehicles and trillions of people, Kel could hear something else. Something humming softer and sweeter than any machine, something that made her want to listen harder and sing along to its tune, something that lingers with her even now.

Kel shoves that thought aside. No time to brood, not when they've gotta figure out how they're gonna get past the inspectors. Not when she's gotta keep Sindren's spirits up. The old guy always looks so sad...

At least they got the kid. That's what matters. He's home and he's safe, and that's why she did this job. That's why she does any of the ridiculous stuff that she does on Coruscant: because someone needs help. There's always something that needs to be done.

Like now.

Just as Kel is about to hop upstairs to see how Sindren is doing, she catches a glimpse of Tessia pacing in the crew lounge, and feels…something. A tug. The kind of thing that a few months ago, she'd chalk up to her having caught a glimpse of Tessia's expression, but now she realizes is…that other thing. Tessia's not doing so great.

A second later:
"Are we there yet?" she calls at the ceiling one more time.
Nope. Definitely not doing great.

"Hey." Kel pokes her head through the door. "You okay in there? I think we're almost home, yeah."