View Full Version : Ord Mantell: Another Man's Trash is Still Junk
Morgan Evanar
Jan 9th, 2009, 09:17:35 PM
After two weeks, a hyperdrive for Serena's ship was far from in sight. None of the usual leads like private traders nor any nearby salvage yards had anything in stock or interest in delivering. No one wanted the hull, either. Morgan had put out ads. After a week there had been no responses. Morgan located several brochures from the original manufacturer of the low-end yacht, so he had a good idea of what else to look in.
He'd kept enough "under the mattress" credits to pay for a ticket to Ord Mantell. Ord Mantell was the only likely place to find the same model of hyperdrive, and it was one of the few locations where Morgan could withdraw a large sum of credits and have it go unnoticed. Even the Empire wasn't keen on tracking Ord Mantell's conventional bank activity: the banks operated with a nearly unprecedented degree of independence partly because they were not "investment" banks. They did personal accounts and deposit boxes. It was a strange system, but it worked.
Morgan stepped off the transport and into the hazy sunlight. The left half of his hair stuck up, while the right stuck out, a product of sleeping against his hand. Two days of bristly facial shadow and a blaster let him blend into the crowd. He looked like any random human spacer, just a bit taller. He rubbed his eyes and yawned. With the sun overhead, and bright, he wished he had a set of shades. He trundled away from the landing pad, and toward the center of town.
I'nu
Jan 9th, 2009, 10:28:31 PM
I'nu was a mutt.
A mix of Cathar, Zeltron and base-line, he was filled with more culture than could be handle. It was evident too. In the wild of his hazel eyes sat his father side, his hair in a jumbled mix of natural white and black locks. The mixture between Zeltron and Cathar was a rare breed indeed, and few even believed him when he explained the phenomenon.
Below his unusual gaze sat a face fitting of a Zeltron, but skin too brown to truly claim. All the blame was to his mother for such motherly looks. He wasn’t handsome, he was beautiful. It wasn’t the sort of compliment a man liked much.
He couldn’t do much about it, though.
It wasn’t like he had a blaster to shut anyone up. Ever since he was a child he avoided violence. Of course that didn’t mean he couldn’t be, but he disregarded it. He was too lazy for tussling. There was so much more he could do was how he thought about it. His father wouldn’t have that though. The man was well known back on Corellia for his fighting skills. The man wasn’t about to raise his boy to be anybody’s coward.
So, he trained a bit. Even went to the gym with his father from time to time and switched roles on being the punching bag. Honestly, I’nu had a bit of fun with it, but he was into other things like history, music, and all sorts of other junk. Eventually he just quit going.
Little did he know he’d be dealing junk in the end on top of a jewel…sorta.
It was Ord Mantell, and he was a junk dealer. He somehow got locked in a deal with his Uncle who was the head of the business, and was managing the joint while Uncle Lew was dancing his last days away back on Spira. Pretty obvious who got the short end of the stick on that deal.
So, he sat there, rear in a seat at the front of the small hole-in-the-wall, waiting for a customer. He had been waited all week, and not a single person had come. The business wasn’t looking good, especially with a name like Crap Pile.
“How did I get in this,” he pouted, playing one the games on his datapad.
Morgan Evanar
Jan 11th, 2009, 02:29:10 PM
Morgan's first purchase was a pair of polarized sunshades from a small knick-knack shop a hundred meters from the landing zone. The price was nearly double what it should have been for coated plastic, but it was worth it. He bought two oversweet, overpriced protein bars and ate one as he walked down the main drag. He'd been to Ord Mantell before, but for a slicing job in the banking sector and "the junk zone" was an unknown. After a kilometer of gimmick tourist shops near the passenger port, it gave way to the real business of this part of the planet: the trade of old parts. Ships, droids, speeders, industrial equipment and home appliances alike all made mountains of... junk.
Morgan entered the first establishment. The walls were lined with shelves loaded with smaller parts. A Squib bounced towards him. It was covered in yellow fur with blue-green tufts sticking out from it's ears.
"Hey hey customer welcome to Much Good Junk! Whatcha buying, we've got it, betcha!" A slight smile tugged at Morgan's lips. Squibs were one of the principal sellers of all bits of stuff in the galaxy, and his mother dealt with them a good deal for droid parts.
"Got a KDY model RK-77a hyperdrive casing?" Morgan asked, slighty bemused.
"Sure sure but why you want something so old? We've got a buncha buncha SK-05's." The squib bounced over the counter and settled in what used to be a bar chair. It tapped in the model.
"Got SK-05s." It repeated in a friendly tone. "Whole drive, cheap cheap cheap."
"How much?" Morgan asked. He was willing to play along for a bit.
"Cheap! Two-thou!" It was a good deal, but he knew they'd leave out the power regulator just before the drive, or something similar. Squibs might be friendly, but they were never straightforward.
Morgan shook his head and waived goodbye. "I need a RK-77a."
The squib bounced back over the counter and attempted to slow him down by bouncing in front of him. Morgan knew if he kept walking forward it would give up, and it did.
The experience repeated itself (but less "squibby" as his Dad would have said) as he walked down the road and into the evening. Morgan was surprised. After 30 shops and seven hours, no one had the part.
So, without much hope, he entered the Crap Pile.
"Hi." He said automatically. "I'm looking for a KDY RK-77a hyperdrive casing."
I'nu
Jan 15th, 2009, 02:35:41 PM
I'nu sat.
Slumped over in a seat, this was casual. Only a few customers ever came in a day. Even fewer actually bought anything. Somewhere in the muddle of junk heaps, backyards, and trash, Crap Pile found itself in the worst position for good traffic. It was the life of a boy becoming a man, and it wasn't the best life. That was a well known fact.
Old droids dangled from the ceilings, as others were stacked across in a random set of different models, and company orders. Time rusted most of the hulls, while others were half-lit, slighted by charge troubles. Some of the droids didn't even have coverings, but they seemed to more practical models. There was little need for them in the world, and here they stayed - right next to I'nu.
It sort of fit...too well.
I'nu was still meddling with his game on the datapad. Feet up on the counter, his eyes strayed once and a while back at the holo-feed. A list of frequency beacons rolled down the screen under the feed, running the calls he missed and returned. Nearby sat a near archiac projector brought to life some of his ship parts. The back was in black, hidden behind a cloth, and splashed with mechanics of more kind than the droid parts the front of the store was warmed with.
Amidst all the dull, and junk, it was hard for I'nu to ever notice new customers. They were unexpected guest, at least in his eyes, and though his voice was lukewarm, his rasp was a bit unfriendly. Well, just a bit, it was hard to really note when his smile widen.
And so it did, as he shifted his eyes off to the man. He was tall, big, and a tad tired from the looks of things. Most visitors were at this time of day - most went out in early parts of Ord Mantell's day to handle their problems.
'Ooo, hey -- uh, ya wants just that?"
I'nu didn't blink, or think, just clicked. His hands went to work, running a long the buttons. The KDY R-77 casing blurted out from the holo, and I'nu flashed back to his game. He was just about to win.
Morgan Evanar
Jan 17th, 2009, 06:39:49 PM
Morgan blinked.
"Yes." He looked at the holo, it was the R-77. Perfect. Unfortunately, the proprietor went back to his holopad.
"Do you actually have it?" He asked. I'nu was completely preoccupied. It figured. The one place that had it, and the owner didn't seem to have much interest in sell it. Morgan moved to the counter, and placed his hands on it. He leaned forward and loomed over I'nu.
"I'm very interested in that hyperdrive." Morgan said.
I'nu
Jan 19th, 2009, 11:28:43 AM
...very interested...
I'nu lifted his eyes. They lifted slowly. Slipping a long all his features, he finally found the man's eyes with a smile. In the bare silence, only a blink in time, he wondered. This was definately going to be a catch. The only problem was that there had to be a catch to it. I'nu was running low on funds, and he needed to get more for his buck.
Running his legs from the counter to the floor, he bounced into a quick stand. The datapad still was in his grip, but his hands had loosened just as his lips had. He was smiling now. A smile all too clever, yet so innocent that it didn't so much want trust, but demanded it.
"Welluh I got id den. Jus' run ovah 'ere wittme..."
His voice trailed as he spun over the counter, landing next to the man with a nod. Turning about, he slapped the datapad back on the display table. Shuffling his feet over, he roamed through the junk hive to the back door where all the heap of beautiful crap lie.
"C'mon..."
Morgan Evanar
Jan 21st, 2009, 10:26:32 PM
He shrugged. He'd met people who were hard to understand before, but this guy was up there. Weird accent, to say the least. That grin, too. Morgan wasn't sure of this guy at all, or maybe he just needed to get out more. He'd met the type before. At least he didn't rub his face on the parts. So far, he hadn't gotten past any of the counters until now. No one had an old hyperdrive that never saw much use to begin with.
He followed I'nu out into the dimming light. Dusk had set upon them, but Morgan was undaunted. He had excellent night vision, and he needed this hyperdrive. He'd find it if it was here, but hopefully he wouldn't have to. Serena told him to focus and think about the now. Morgan thought about the how hungry he was. It wasn't working.
The junk didn't seem to be arranged in a specific, organized manner. At least not one that was apparent to Morgan. I'nu seemed to know where he was going, though.
I'nu
Jan 21st, 2009, 10:39:54 PM
I'nu slipped pass the parts, walked over fallen droids, and crouched under some metal. The place looked to be mess, I'nu didn't notice. This was normal for him. He had been through the junkyard far too often, and there wasn't a thought to be had. Each motion was effortless, yet meaningful.
He wanted that money.
Opening the curtain, the world of new, polished, big...junk, was on display. A large field of great, giant starship parts, engines, hulls, and alike were stacked around each other, forming some pathway to a center piece off in the distance. I'nu's uncle had managed to bundle enough credits to buy a decent plot of land, and it was useful.
Especially for customers on the move. They needed good parts, and good parts he sort of had.
Sort of.
"Ova' 'ere...down that way. Right there, check it out."
He pointed only a few feet away. He wasn't interested in walking over. I'nu rather the man inspect, than slowly, creep up, and smirk away at the merchandise. Then, and only then, would he throw in his side-notes, and possibly some quotes on the well-tuned item.
Pull them in, and then snatch them up!
Morgan Evanar
Jan 25th, 2009, 11:29:49 AM
Morgan had made himself quite familiar with the R-77 series hyperdrive in the vain hope that he might find another Now that he had one staring at him, he wasn't quite sure where to begin. It was mostly protected from the elements by a subframe of some freighter. Morgan removed a scanner designed for hyperdrive diagnostics and inspection. He crouched down and systematically waved it over the drive casing. If there were any flaws in the structure, the device would have squawked loudly.
The service access panel was even intact, complete with the requisite etchings of ideal performance and calibration parameters. Morgan pulled a screwdriver from his pocket and removed the plate. He let loose a low whistle. It was mint. He'd just hoped for the casing, but everything was here. Power relays, drive core. It wasn't even dusty. He plugged the scan tool into controller and rubbed his jaw. The damn thing had less than a thousand hours on it. Something bad must've happened to the ship, but considering that the R77 hadn't been manufactured for over a hundred years, he'd probably never know.
"I'll give you 1700 for it." It was, put mildly, a lowball figure.
I'nu
Jan 25th, 2009, 03:29:34 PM
The hazel balls of joy shutter like a holovid with frequency problems. After a display of interest, intrigue, and studious observation, the man was trying to haggle. The day had been long, boring, and controlled - he didn't expect this. For one extra second he sat there. Motionless he was, nulling over a possible, clever, decent response. I'nu was not dumbfound. He was never dumbfound. But he didn't know what to say.
Finally, he gave in. Letting a sigh drive the moment away, his head drooped down. Eyes closed, and lips pressed to his cheeks, he smiled knowingly as he slipped his hands in his pockets. Sweeping over the earth like a gust, he moved smoothly over to the man, waving his hand up in absent defeat.
"Now y'kno' dat aint gunna work...raise dat."
He finally said, his slick tongue running over the rasp deeply rooted in his accent. I'nu was going to get enough to pay for his workless day. Not a single customer had stayed longer than this fellow had all day, much less shown any true interest. So far, from the review sheet, it wasn't looking too good for the Crap Pile.
Morgan Evanar
Jan 28th, 2009, 07:27:48 PM
Morgan raised an eyebrow. He'd stumped the junk trader for a moment. In his less ethical days, Morgan might have considered trying to sell the mutt his own pants. I'nu wasn't a natural salesman, but at least he knew when he was being lowballed. Morgan knew how to sell things if he needed to, and definitely knew how to haggle. Not haggling on Nar Shadda was financial suicide.
"No ship has used these things in a hundred years, and the run wasn't that big to begin with. 1775." His counter-offer was too low, but he needed to figure out what I'nu's price was. Fact of the matter was he'd spend up to 4000 credits if he absolutely had to, but that would be for a modern CEC drive with the needed equipment to make it work with the KDY wiring and power. Morgan wasn't exactly a starship mechanic, but he knew how to wire and convert power systems in his sleep.
I'nu
Jan 29th, 2009, 09:00:10 AM
I'nu's head tilt. Then, his eyes sharpened. Then, he was silent. He stared for a moment. Took in the bare seconds, naked of lies, and full of tension. Before he allowed himself to blink, his left brow raised. The look was at the least comical. I'nu wasn't serious. He was never serious. Yet, the fact that he found comedy in this man's attempt had nearly the same effect.
Drooping his head, the flock of hair trickled over. Black and white strands hanged over as he thought. It was all under the time of his favorite swoop highlights, but the moment seem longer. Silence was an intense thing.
"Aiite--aiite, y'must think I aint bumped into uh few Squibs o' somethin...
Bluhd - its higher. Start swinging at 2500 o' somethin. If y'gunna do it, do it wright."
I'nu shook his head, smile smeared across his lips. He was delighted at the try. Customers could be very amusing, very entertaining.
Morgan Evanar
Jan 30th, 2009, 08:29:03 PM
Morgan snorted, playing along.
"2050." He'd see if he'd play for a few extra credits or not. It was much larger jump than his last offer. This was the game, the race to the middle. He bored a stare into the junk trader, squarely putting the ball in his court. His face was emotionless.
I'nu
Feb 1st, 2009, 03:01:56 PM
"2050?"
I'nu laughed, stuffing his hands into his pockets. He shook his head. There was no words necessary; he was amused. This ping-pong match was going somewhere, but not fast enough. I'nu wanted what he wanted - and fast. It was true he didn't have anywhere to go to, or anything to do really, but this was business. Whenever business came in, it had to be handled hastily, and orderly.
This was a junk establishment, but it was his junk establishmet.
He worked fast, and ended early. Thats how he liked his days, and thats what he'd get.
"Y'crazy right? I woulda swo' I said 2500--not 2050. Betta' raise that number, mista."
Morgan Evanar
Feb 1st, 2009, 07:03:22 PM
Morgan sighed. It was not a dramatic sigh. It was the sigh of frustration and tired from a day of walking through junk yards. He was getting hungry again.
"For 4k I can walk out of here and buy the conversion parts to run a Corellian drive, along with the drive itself."
"Twenty-two fifty."
I'nu
Feb 1st, 2009, 07:53:31 PM
"2500."
I'nu didn't blink.
He was always stubborn. Maybe it was a good business tactic, but he wasn't thinking tactic anymore. Matter fact, I'nu wasn't thinking at all. Emotions had taken pilot, and he had no want to stop it. Any other time he might be cool, distant, and collected, but as he had repeated over and over in his head: he wanted what he wanted.
And, of course, the spoiled little brat meant to get it.
Morgan Evanar
Feb 1st, 2009, 08:24:11 PM
Fine. Fine fine fine. But curiosity had struck him. Why 2500? It wasn't really worth it. The drive was, frankly, unpopular. It's rarity didn't make it any more valuable. Most of the still space-worthy vessels that had the KDY model RK-77a had long ago ditched it for something from CEC or a newer KDY hyperdrive. It wasn't particularly efficient or fast, nor was it known for exceptional durability.
Morgan stood for the first time in fifteen minutes. He folded his arms over his chest.
"What makes it worth 2500?"
I'nu
Feb 1st, 2009, 08:34:36 PM
I'nu was on the winning team. He knew that much. The man's question didn't deserve a straight answer, neither. I'nu never gave straight answers in the first place. He was artful in his approach, always. Whether it was subtle, nearly meaningless, or as important as 2,500 credits he was artful. It was how he was. It was how he moved.
"In the bucket fee," he said, a smirk running a long his lip like a fish down-stream.
Then, with tactful carefulness, and calmness, he walked off. Passing Morgan on his steady step, he hunched over to detect the goods. All was in order as the customer wanted.
This was a good purchase, at least for I'nu. A good, decent pay for the day, if he would say so. Yet, he wouldn't - at least not until Morgan was long gone and he had someone to brag to.
Morgan Evanar
Feb 1st, 2009, 11:40:53 PM
It was another term for "I'm bending you over the bucket." Delightful. Morgan was getting frustrated. No one liked being bent over the barrel. Doubly so after trudging around, looking for a rare, unwanted model of hyperdrive because you're stuck in an unplanned place. He stopped himself from grinding his teeth or, worse, growling. Mom growled, and would be if she was here. He took a deep breath. He felt too unsettled. A greedy trader shouldn't rattle him at all, but something about the smug smirk pushed his buttons.
"Twenty-five and a pair of zeros." Morgan fanned the three chits out between his thumb and forefinger. A pair of thousand credit and a five-hundred. I'nu's hand came forward, and he dropped them the inch it needed to go.
"I've got a lift..." I'nu began. Morgan picked up the eighty kilo hyperdrive with a grunt. It was deep dusk, and he wanted to go. Precariously, he pulled the unit around his torso and onto his back. The weigh rested mostly on his hands, but also against his shoulders.
"Unless you're giving it to me, I'm not interested." Morgan said, and started back to the entrance.
I'nu
Feb 2nd, 2009, 01:19:11 AM
"Give it to ya?!!"
The words blew through the junk yard. His voice echoed in a bellow, outraged, and confused. Struggling to comprehend, he stumbled into a full on dash before skidding across the hard soil by Morgan.
In a sudden stop, his hands flipped up, holding out a ward, trying to stop the man. Not a name had been given yet, but it didn't matter. This man had become important. Right when I'nu felt he had him, he was taking leave. It wasn't looking good. Seconds ago, he was winning, and all was well - but now it was an empty pocket affair and that was worse than any nightmare he might have tonight.
And that might was stressed in his mind, because sleeping was very unlikely if he didn't get these credits. Rent was coming up soon, and he'd have to work his network to grab in enough to place in the bucket. This shop wouldn't hold up any longer than his credits did, and that was a fact.
"Wait-wait-wait--watcha talk'n, silly. Y'kno' y'can get it fo' dat o' price y'said. I was jus mess'n witcha--y'kno--jus mess'n."
"2050, right, right?
Morgan Evanar
Feb 2nd, 2009, 10:45:53 PM
Morgan came to a halt. His eyes narrowed and he frowned.
"You've already got the credits. I'm not paying you again." He had, of course, dropped 2500 credits into I'nu's hand. Had the mutt lost it? Maybe he never had it to begin with. Maybe all the old junk had gotten to I'nu. All Morgan knew was that he wanted to leave.
"And I'm certainly not paying you for a repulsor sled." Morgan said, as evenly as he could. He was starting to loose his patience. Something about this guy got to him. Something he'd figure out later. He took a deep breath, closed his eyes for a moment, and started to walk around the junk dealer.
I'nu
Feb 3rd, 2009, 10:11:45 AM
"I'm not talk'n bout dat o' thang -- I'm talkin' bout dis."
The door behind him was wide, open, but there was a bustle inside. With a flick of his wrist, the droids came alive, prancing about frantically. They were helpful items on ships, and I'nu hated droids. Of course, he wanted to get the credits, but droids were a nuisance to him. The older they got, the more new models came out, and their value dived faster than a Mon Calamari.
It was a sad fact, and he wanted to win big. If he could manage enough out of the man to get the 2,500 maybe he could get more. The thought wasn't a very righteous one, but I'nu wasn't a very righteous person.
He could be greedy.
"So, whatcha say? Y'can get mo' den dat too fo' that price y'had. 2,050, eh?"
Morgan Evanar
Feb 3rd, 2009, 10:50:59 PM
The parade of droids clanged and clattered. He watched the various models move back and forth in a macabre mechanical dance. He could hear the servos whine. Some beeped in protest before the restraining bolt silenced them.
"Twenty fifty?" Morgan asked. I'nu nodded.
"Since it's on the stipulation that I purchase something else..." Morgan trailed off, and scanned the chaos again.
"No." He started to the door again.
I'nu
Feb 4th, 2009, 08:19:46 PM
"No?"
An eyebrow shifted. He shuffled. He wanted more, there was something else to this man he wanted. I'nu could feel it in his bones. Deep down, there was something in this man he wanted, but he didn't know what. How he could articulate it was through this business.
It was a rare feeling. A raw feeling.
"Wait--wait--y'sho' ya dont want nothin'?"
Morgan Evanar
Feb 8th, 2009, 02:32:21 PM
Deep down, Morgan wanted to leave. He had eighty kilos of hyperdrive resting on his back and hips. He wanted dinner, a comfortable mattress, and a nap.
"Yes. I have what I came for." He had a thousand things he wanted to tell the junk trader, all of them negative, some of them fair critiques. His bipolar sales approach was annoying and nerve wracking. His smugness, irritating. His lack of straightforward negotiation was, at best, poor judgment and at worst, insulting. The droid dance was nauseating.
There was a pause. I'nu regarded Morgan with confusion and Morgan regarded him with frustration and disdain. I'nu shuffled his feet a little, not expecting the response he received.
Morgan took another step forward.
I'nu
Feb 8th, 2009, 05:19:51 PM
I'nu didn't want to be straight-forward. He liked wit. He relish in the idea of being a step ahead. The youthful exuberance he held was held cleverly. All his bipolar nature, wild behavior, and sudden change in personality was calculated and educated. From the man's response, haste, yet stressed politeness it was clear where this man was from.
And I'nu was certain, at this point, this man wasn't from here.
A smirk sled across the man's lip as he casually strolled a long side the man, bucking ahead only a bit to show who was lead. Morgan would not be leaving if I'nu had anything to do with it.
The man was at a disadvantage already. With the money already in I'nu's possession, and no further purchases to be made, there was only room for a withdrawal. However, this withdrawal would not be a bank transaction. This withdrawal would be a lot more personal.
"So y'just gunna pick up 'n leave, eh?"
I'nu grimace now. It was an obvious feint. An exaggeration of his words, emphasized to the tee so that the moment would play out like some old holovid the junkman had seen in his toddler years. Most of the time the villain didn't win, but I'nu wasn't the villain. No, he considered himself more of an anti-hero. Someone who did the wrong thing, but because it had to be done.
And he had to get this money, one way or another. If he didn't, then all was to hell - and he wouldn't allow that.
"Well, I ain't into dat so much--it jus' aint polite, y'know?"
The small scout blaster his cousin had given him months ago came sliding from his back pocket. It was certainly small, especially in his big hands. The slender boy stood, hands out, clasped to the hilt, ready to unload. He had no plans to shoot, but the point had to be made. This was officially a stick up.
"Gimme watcha got, quick, fast - and we can move on withoutta hitch, aiite?"
Morgan Evanar
Feb 8th, 2009, 07:14:38 PM
This had gone poorly. Morgan stared at the blaster. The small weapon, if it hit in certain places, would kill him. If he wasn't carrying the hyperdrive, this would be trivial. I'nu never would have been able to draw the weapon all of the way.
'Allright." Morgan said. "I'm going to set the hyperdrive down." He crouched down, and carefully set the hyperdrive on the concrete floor.
"Aiite, fast, credits." I'nu said as Morgan stood upright, hands near his head.
"Okay." Morgan's right hand slipped toward his pocket. Time seemed to crawl. He stared at I'nu, and his eyes began to blink. He watched them close.
Blink. Morgan appeared next to the mutt, to I'nu's right. Morgan's left hand shot out, grabbed I'nu's wrist, and lifted upwards. The blaster went off into the space formerly occupied by Morgan. He continued to lift until I'nu's feet dangled in the air. I'nu's grip failed, and the blaster fell to the floor. With a little aid from the Force, Morgan was strong enough to crush the bones in I'nu's arm, and it tempted him.
I'nu
Feb 8th, 2009, 10:40:52 PM
Fear, fright, disdain, distraught weaved his brain into a mess. The pile of junk his yard knew couldn't compare. Bad memories flashed here and there, trying to compare his lost. The blaster was gone, and his defenses low. I'nu had been in this situation before, but this was far more terrifying. What he had lost was more than the freedom to move, but the freedom to be.
Without these credits, he was back into the world of slaving for his parents. Without these credits he was back in their house, under their words, and simply a boy again. Without these credits, he wasn't free.
A whimper would have betrayed him if he hadn't felt this before. His father was a champion. Teräs Käsi ran through his family line like DNA, and though he wasn't as inherit he did hold some skill. Yet, they seemed useless here. The tireless struggle to free himself from the grip, from the strength, from the brute, was pointless. This stranger was stronger, for some reason. And somehow, he was faster too.
In seconds he had appeared in control. It was mind-boggling. I'nu didn't have the chance to question, or want. He was too suppressed. He was too in pain. The agony was far deeper than his wrist. All the memories of the emptiness he had run from just flourished under his grasp, and the firmness made sure he couldn't flee anymore. In the buyers hold he was powerless to himself.
He was weak.
Then, suddenly, he wasn't. Lids closed, eyes shaky, his face seemed ready for tears. Distraught slither through his cheeks as they puffed up, pressing out with the power of his growing frown. A pout might have came if a rage had not boiled underneath, and his arm didn't wiggle in a try for freedom. As the struggle got to him, he let go. Adrenaline rushed through like a bolt of lightning from the sky, and his thoughts blacken. In the darkness of his mind impulse took over. He didn't think, he just felt and he only felt turmoil.
A pocket of air burst at his hand, blasting him out of the man's grasp, but not into safety. His body went flying off to the wall, banging through a line of standing droids and stray parts. The wall finally stopped his flight with a crunching thump. Slumped over on the ground, he was gone.
Maybe he was having good dreams, because from the look of the junk yard he had been living a nightmare. After his flight, crash, bump, and fall from the air pocket burst it was in shambles. Not much was broke, but it was a junk yard - it was already a mess. Anymore ruckus and the place would look all the more like a bombing sight.
I'nu wouldn't want that, but how would he know? He was spelling zzzzs.
Morgan Evanar
Feb 9th, 2009, 11:09:43 PM
Morgan felt his face distort from the blast. In his surprise, he let go of I'nu. The torrent of air threw him off his feet. His body rotated when his outstretched hand caught one the bits of junk hanging from the ceiling. He began to spin slowly, and brought his limbs in for protection. His hands covered his head. He hit one of the racks of parts back first. The metal shelving distorted and crumpled painfully against his left ribs and shoulder. The cheap L-bracket that held the shelf to the floor gave up, and the first shelf bent into the second while the parts cascaded around him. The next shelf quit, too. The third held. Morgan rolled painfully down on top of random ship and droid parts.
His body flopped open. He knew his ribs were very bruised, but not broken. It didn't stop it from hurting. He took a deep breath, and sat up. A lumpy droid motivator unit made itself known beneath his butt. He found his feet a moment later. Part of Morgan wondered what happened. The explosion had been unexpected.
He could see a clear line to his adversary, slumped over in a mess of droids and parts. More importantly, the hyperdrive looked unharmed. Morgan located the small repulsorsled he noticed on the way back inside. I'nu might rise at any moment. He loaded the hyperdrive on. He glanced back at I'nu, and glowered. It wouldn't be worth it to pick the money back from the mutt's pockets. He'd take the sled, and call it even.
With one hand on the sled, he pushed the door open, and left The Crap Pile and it's deranged proprietor behind.
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