Jaden Luka
Jan 19th, 2016, 04:50:59 AM
It started with a twitch. A tiny shuffle. A faint clang of metal against metal. Then a scuff. A jerk. A scratchy rumble. Slowly but surely, a few inches at a time, the socket wrench skitted across the deck plates, reeled in on a tiny length of thread.
Jaden grinned as he tugged more against the twine, feeling it shift inside the sleeve of his overalls and tickle across his chest and abdomen. The mechanism that controlled it all was nestled against his hip. It has once been a mechanical distance tape, one of those contraptions where you fumbled out a whole length of flexible metal, measured how long a thing was, and then flipped a switch that made it all come clickety-clacking back to your hand. That was what it used to be. In fact, it used to be several of such devices, but Jaden's nocturnal inspiration a few nights ago had changed that. It had taken a while to rustle up the components to build his harness; but now an array of little mechanisms loitered on his belt, each one labelled with coloured tape and little hand-written messages that Jaden - and probably only Jaden - found highly amusing. Things like Fixy Doohicky and Suck It, Wrench!
A few seconds later and, with absolute perfection, the socket wrench tugged itself into the palm of Jaden's hand. "Your Jedi powers ain't so fancy now, Amos," he muttered to himself, adjusting the wrench in his grip. The mechanism tried to tug against it a tiny bit, but the resistance was almost negligible; Jaden flipped the switch to lock off the mechanism anyway, and set about loosening the injector housing on his A-Wing's starboard thruster assembly. Okay, so it wasn't a perfect design. The other tools on strands of their own jangled every time his arm moved, and okay sure, there was a high likelihood that things would start getting tangled if he wasn't careful about it. But it was a prototype, you know? A work in progress. A little more brainstorming, or thinktanking, or whatever it was that inventor people did with their time, and he'd be able to make millions with an invention like this. Maybe even enough to buy himself a small moon. Set up a health spa, maybe; spend the rest of his life in some swanky resort surrounded by ladies in bathrobes. All it would take was a little -
Legs.
That wasn't the proper continuation of his thought, but the presence of legs about a foot or so above his head proved to be completely and utterly distracting. More specifically, it was the boots that distracted him: the reverberation through the deck plates of them coming to rest, and the slight shift in the lighting behind him. From this angle, pretty much everything beyond the boots was obscured by the hull of his fighter, no matter how awkwardly he tried to twist and peer; so with a sigh he scooched himself backwards. A little too far backwards as it happened; enough for his shoulders to bump against said boots, and leave him staring up at the figure they belonged to at a somewhat curious angle.
A friendly smile formed itself across his features as his brain managed to translate the foreshortened, upside-down image into a recognisable face. "Hey Kitty," he greeted warmly, wisely using his uncontraptioned hand to offer a small wave. A hint of a frown flickered across his brow. "You should wear skirts more."
Jaden grinned as he tugged more against the twine, feeling it shift inside the sleeve of his overalls and tickle across his chest and abdomen. The mechanism that controlled it all was nestled against his hip. It has once been a mechanical distance tape, one of those contraptions where you fumbled out a whole length of flexible metal, measured how long a thing was, and then flipped a switch that made it all come clickety-clacking back to your hand. That was what it used to be. In fact, it used to be several of such devices, but Jaden's nocturnal inspiration a few nights ago had changed that. It had taken a while to rustle up the components to build his harness; but now an array of little mechanisms loitered on his belt, each one labelled with coloured tape and little hand-written messages that Jaden - and probably only Jaden - found highly amusing. Things like Fixy Doohicky and Suck It, Wrench!
A few seconds later and, with absolute perfection, the socket wrench tugged itself into the palm of Jaden's hand. "Your Jedi powers ain't so fancy now, Amos," he muttered to himself, adjusting the wrench in his grip. The mechanism tried to tug against it a tiny bit, but the resistance was almost negligible; Jaden flipped the switch to lock off the mechanism anyway, and set about loosening the injector housing on his A-Wing's starboard thruster assembly. Okay, so it wasn't a perfect design. The other tools on strands of their own jangled every time his arm moved, and okay sure, there was a high likelihood that things would start getting tangled if he wasn't careful about it. But it was a prototype, you know? A work in progress. A little more brainstorming, or thinktanking, or whatever it was that inventor people did with their time, and he'd be able to make millions with an invention like this. Maybe even enough to buy himself a small moon. Set up a health spa, maybe; spend the rest of his life in some swanky resort surrounded by ladies in bathrobes. All it would take was a little -
Legs.
That wasn't the proper continuation of his thought, but the presence of legs about a foot or so above his head proved to be completely and utterly distracting. More specifically, it was the boots that distracted him: the reverberation through the deck plates of them coming to rest, and the slight shift in the lighting behind him. From this angle, pretty much everything beyond the boots was obscured by the hull of his fighter, no matter how awkwardly he tried to twist and peer; so with a sigh he scooched himself backwards. A little too far backwards as it happened; enough for his shoulders to bump against said boots, and leave him staring up at the figure they belonged to at a somewhat curious angle.
A friendly smile formed itself across his features as his brain managed to translate the foreshortened, upside-down image into a recognisable face. "Hey Kitty," he greeted warmly, wisely using his uncontraptioned hand to offer a small wave. A hint of a frown flickered across his brow. "You should wear skirts more."