Blood Briar
Moon
- Joined
- May 1, 2025
Torn plastic flapped in the wind beneath an overpass linking an industrial and commercial district, laid out near the channel. The din of traffic was quiet; even inside of business hours, downturned business and doomed development kept this part of the city ill-occupied, and it was long past closing time. Cigarette flame shone in the muted dark of the indefinitely delayed construction site, its planning derailed by fraud and bankruptcy. Two figures conversed softly amidst the shell left behind as the drone of an engine approached.
Headlights cut into the darkness. A deep blue (nearing black) motorcycle swung down the access road and slowed to a halt near an already parked car before cutting out and coming to rest. The rider slid off it and lifted a closely matching helmet from her head. Shaking loose electric blue hair, she set the helmet onto the seat and walked beneath the shadow of the overpass, assessing the pair as she approached.
A good heft past 6', the taller of the two bore the amber plumage and scaly flesh of a Charak, with a cigarette nestled in its beak. They wore a synth-leather jacket like the rider, but in a dull ochre and orange instead of black, and had a very tall axe with a long, wide blade strapped to their back. Their spiked tail swished casually while their eyes scanned the roads without impatience; the fourth member of the group had yet to arrive. Next to the Charak was a Human, around the same height as the rider, reclined against a bundle of steel rebar that never received its concrete shell. Clad in baggy, eclectically black and white pants with a matching shirt, he was sporting a pair of machine pistols and a utility belt laden with gear. His facial hair was notably groomed, with a thin handlebar mustache and short beard trimmed to the chin. The pair seemed familiar enough, given how close they'd situated next to each other.
"Styrix?" the rider asked toward the Charak. They nodded. A hand was offered and taken, precision filed claws carefully avoiding tearing a hole in the rider's gloves. "And Brahms." She repeated the gesture with the Human; the show of respect was an important ritual. Even among criminals. "You must be Therrye," the Charak rumbled. The rider nodded with a slight smile, more for recognition than anything else. "Ready to make some bank?" Therrye gave Brahms a look of mild surprise and then the smile became genuine. "That's the plan." He followed that with a fist-pump, cutting through any tension cleanly and sparking amusement. Infectious grins made for good company in dangerous times.
Dozens of questions waited in Therrye's thoughts about the job - the details were thin from Joi - but that should wait for the last arrival. That left a couple, though. "Joi said you two go way back," she offered toward Styrix. "We fled the Boral mines together," they intoned, thoughtfully. "Then I should thank you." She smiled appreciatively, but the Charak shook their head. "No. I owe my freedom to her."
It was a good start, at least. They looked capable enough, too, and the Dust Cartel's mines on Boral III weren't an easy place to escape. Joi had shared both too few and too many details on her years there over drinks. Plenty enough to light the easy anger and the hard hate in her. And, well, some of her baser impulses when the urge to protect someone wasn't something that could be acted on. Joi didn't have any interest in bedding coworkers, though. It was probably for the best. Therrye didn't need or want to make her work complicated.
The sound of approach brought the attention of all three of them to the road.
Headlights cut into the darkness. A deep blue (nearing black) motorcycle swung down the access road and slowed to a halt near an already parked car before cutting out and coming to rest. The rider slid off it and lifted a closely matching helmet from her head. Shaking loose electric blue hair, she set the helmet onto the seat and walked beneath the shadow of the overpass, assessing the pair as she approached.
A good heft past 6', the taller of the two bore the amber plumage and scaly flesh of a Charak, with a cigarette nestled in its beak. They wore a synth-leather jacket like the rider, but in a dull ochre and orange instead of black, and had a very tall axe with a long, wide blade strapped to their back. Their spiked tail swished casually while their eyes scanned the roads without impatience; the fourth member of the group had yet to arrive. Next to the Charak was a Human, around the same height as the rider, reclined against a bundle of steel rebar that never received its concrete shell. Clad in baggy, eclectically black and white pants with a matching shirt, he was sporting a pair of machine pistols and a utility belt laden with gear. His facial hair was notably groomed, with a thin handlebar mustache and short beard trimmed to the chin. The pair seemed familiar enough, given how close they'd situated next to each other.
"Styrix?" the rider asked toward the Charak. They nodded. A hand was offered and taken, precision filed claws carefully avoiding tearing a hole in the rider's gloves. "And Brahms." She repeated the gesture with the Human; the show of respect was an important ritual. Even among criminals. "You must be Therrye," the Charak rumbled. The rider nodded with a slight smile, more for recognition than anything else. "Ready to make some bank?" Therrye gave Brahms a look of mild surprise and then the smile became genuine. "That's the plan." He followed that with a fist-pump, cutting through any tension cleanly and sparking amusement. Infectious grins made for good company in dangerous times.
Dozens of questions waited in Therrye's thoughts about the job - the details were thin from Joi - but that should wait for the last arrival. That left a couple, though. "Joi said you two go way back," she offered toward Styrix. "We fled the Boral mines together," they intoned, thoughtfully. "Then I should thank you." She smiled appreciatively, but the Charak shook their head. "No. I owe my freedom to her."
It was a good start, at least. They looked capable enough, too, and the Dust Cartel's mines on Boral III weren't an easy place to escape. Joi had shared both too few and too many details on her years there over drinks. Plenty enough to light the easy anger and the hard hate in her. And, well, some of her baser impulses when the urge to protect someone wasn't something that could be acted on. Joi didn't have any interest in bedding coworkers, though. It was probably for the best. Therrye didn't need or want to make her work complicated.
The sound of approach brought the attention of all three of them to the road.
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