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Abarai Loki
May 28th, 2012, 11:46:53 AM
"Justice is always violent to the offending party, for every man is innocent in his own eyes."



The Whaladon was asleep. Lonely corridors, pale and long, throbbed with the lazy hum of Corellian engines. There was nothing; not the lively clamour of voices or the ceaseless drone of shuffling feet; the chaos of day surrendered to the night, taken in a stranglehold of tranquility. Then footsteps, drumming a stacatto beat into the metal, echoed in the hollow halls. Abarai Loki walked with purpose, burdened under a heavy backpack. When he reached the end of the corridor, the turbolift greeted him with a sleepy yawn. Swift was the lift in its descent, and with it came the sluggish churn of innards and the sinking dread of the fall. It had been a week since the combat drop onto Ilum, and in the aftermath of which, so much had changed. Now, the cargo bay resounded with the crack and hiss of newly-minted lightsabers. It was a sobering success. And, while bacta made short work of cuts and bruises, there were some wounds that only time could heal, for they were raw, and ran deep.

After a moment, the turbolift doors parted, revealing a long stretch of hangar space populated with starfighters and shuttles. Here, the first signs of life, as a couple of deckhands busied themselves with the disembowelled electronics of an Actis interceptor, while its mounted astromech hooted furiously overhead. Another such ship was being prepped by a small team on the far side of the hangar bay, beside which there was a conspicuously empty space, Loki frowned and hurried. Greeted by the ranking officer, he was quick to deal with the tedious discourse that preceeded every flight, and climbed into his ship. It was much smaller than an A-Wing, which suited him fine, and had a faded blue livery, weathered from years of service during the Clone Wars. And while a fresh coat of paint looked smart, indeed the offer had been on the table, the young Jedi was explicit that his ship was to retain its old-fashioned appearance. Everytime he sunk into the musty cockpit, a quiet thrill like electricity surged through him, for he was sitting in a piece of authentic Jedi history.

The cockpit sealed with a heavy clunk, shutting out the barked orders and grinding of docking clamps. His seat gave a soft shudder as the reactor hummed to life. Caught in the vice grip of the docking clamps, the interceptor and its booster ring were lifted and hauled into position before the magnetic shield. Once the pre-flight cycle was complete, the clamps released with a hiss and the ship wavered gingerly in the air. Easing down on the foot pedals, Loki allowed the starfighter to drift forward, scrutinising the closing gap between the airlock perimeter and the bulky hyperdrive frame. On his flank, the mounted R4 droid gave an apprehensive whine. All was going well, until just as he was about to clear the magnetic shield, he heard a piercing scratch which rang throughout the hanger. The little astromech whistled, its domed head spun, and found itself on the recieving end of a damning glare. Finally, the interceptor spilled out of the transport and into the deep Stygian soup.

Surely enough, Loki was greeted by the sight of an abandoned booster ring, and went rigid in his seat as a second starfighter shot past at alarming speed. S-Foils deployed, it turned into a wild spin and tumbled out of sight. Opening a comm channel, he said:

"Corell Capstan, if only you were this punctual for your lightsaber lessons."

Corell Capstan
Jun 6th, 2012, 12:42:44 PM
There were thousands of parents all over the galaxy - both human and alien alike - who, upon handing their teenage children the keys to their first speeder, experienced the same sense of ominous trepidation that Abarai Loki must have felt on granting Corell Capstan the clearance to fly a Jedi interceptor. While the young Jedi Knight eased his starfighter free of its moorings with the speed and bravado of a bantha's fart, Corell had her on-board astromech squealing in delight. Or perhaps fear. She was too busy turning the ship through a wing-over-wing barrel roll to decide.

She banked the starfighter into a wide curving turn, easing off on the thrusters and angling the nose towards where Loki still sat just drifting in space.

“Well, now we're both here and you've got your training wheels off, so let's get going.”

Abarai Loki
Jun 7th, 2012, 06:00:02 AM
"Training wheels," Loki scoffed, then thumbed the comm, "We now have... less than two hours before we must return."

It was all the prompting his apprentice required. When it came to the delicate matter of time-keeping, together, following incidents infamous and innumerable, they had reached an understanding. It was really quite simple. When Corell was on time, Loki didn't speak about it. So he remained silent, and watched. The second interceptor was manuevered into position with deceptive ease and locked with its booster ring. Through his viewport, Loki fancied his apprentice looked a little too pleased with herself when she looked his way. Then, with a frown, he wiped an intolerable smudge from the transparisteel using the cuff of his tunic. His astromech gave a string of beeps, and in an instant, lines of text unravelled on the monitor, informing him the hyperdrive was spooled.

"Corell Capstan, where did you say you acquired these co-ordinates?"

Corell Capstan
Jun 7th, 2012, 09:14:12 AM
“Abarai Loki,” she began, mimicking the young Knight's fixation for addressing her by her full name. As she spoke Corell sat forward in her cockpit, watching with a smile as the Wheel's combat air patrol weaved through the convoys larger ships. The after-burn of their engines painted long strokes of intertwining light across the otherwise dark sky.

The starfighters were a constant presence, protecting the Jedi at every hour of the day. With their dependence on hyperspace transport ringers, the Eta-2 interceptors would never be able to perform the same duty – but there were plenty of other uses for starfighters. It remained to be seen whether Abarai Loki approved of those uses, however.

“I got these co-ordinates,” Corell went on, “From the most reliable source I know: Captain Radley.”

Abarai Loki
Jun 10th, 2012, 09:25:10 AM
"Radley."

Dark memories surfaced, of kloo horns and cigar smoke, when Loki, Corell, and Anbira travelled to Dac aboard the Bad Mamma Jamma, captained by the chocolate-furred Togorian, B.B. Radley. If that man was anymore laid back, thought Loki, he'd be horizontal. Nothing appeared to phase him. There was no danger grave enough to part the thick grey cloud in which he was perpetually enshrined, and it seemed, he felt there was no circumstance that couldn't be improved with an impromptu spot of hooting jazz. The young Jedi frowned and gently turned his ship until he fell in line with Corell. He cast his apprentice a sideways glance.

"I hope you reminded Captain Radley that these starfighters are armed."

Then, with a burst of blue light, the interceptor vanished amongst the canopy of stars.