Spitfire Soul, Heart of Gold

Desperation

Outfit: Clothing | Glove | Right Arm | Talisman
Weapons: Whatever she could hide in arm compartment
The cold steel pressed against her back, a harsh contrast to the fevered heat still burning in her muscles. Azzie sat curled in the corner of the dark cell, her knees drawn up against her chest, arms wrapped tightly around them. The nightmares had woken her again—visions of blood, the clash of blades, and faces twisted in agony. Some were familiar. Others were not. But all of them felt real. Too real.
She clenched her jaw and forced slow, steady breaths through her nose. Her ribs ached with every inhale, a reminder of the damage still lurking beneath. Darth Anthemous,

Azzie shifted, biting back a groan as the dull throb in her shin flared back to life. Even in the dim red lighting of the cell, she could see the ugly bruising beneath the torn fabric of her pants. Probably still chipped. Not that it mattered much. Her attempts to break herself out thus far had proved less than eventful.
She squeezed her eyes shut, but that only made the visions worse. The whispers of her nightmares clung to her mind like damp fog, creeping in from the edges, distorting everything. There had been something—someone—calling her name before she woke. A ghostly echo of voices from the past? Or something else? She couldn't be sure anymore. The lines between reality and dreams were growing harder to understand.
And

Her chest clenched painfully as she reached out again, instinctively, through that fragile and blooming, unseen tether. But there was nothing. No presence. Just an aching, yawning emptiness. It was hard not to acknowledge the irony in the fact that she had spent so long trying to ignore that tether, only to end up desperately searching for it. She had felt him slipping further and further away, like a fading star in the night, until there was nothing left to grasp onto. Much too far from her now, she guessed.
Azzie let out a ragged, guttural scream, her voice raw with fury and despair as she threw herself forward, yanking viciously at the chains that bound her wrists to the cold walls. Pain exploded through her arms, her muscles burning, her leg screaming in protest, but she didn't care. She wrenched against the restraints until her skin tore, blood smearing once again against the metal, her breath hitching in frantic gasps.
She turned her rage on the walls themselves, slamming her fists against the unyielding metal, over and over, knuckles splitting open with every strike. Every punch was a battle cry, a desperate bid to fight against the suffocating reality of this prison. When her strength finally failed her, she sagged against the cold, heaving, her body trembling, her vision swimming with tears she refused to shed.
You're losing yourself, a voice in the back of her mind whispered. If you were stronger, you'd be able to break past this without a second thought. It wouldn't matter what kind of telekinetic absorbing material it was made of.
Her breath hitched as she curled into a ball in the corner. Azzie glanced toward the door—no one. No shadows lurking just beyond the faintly buzzing plasma wall. No prying eyes. Only then did she allow herself to break.
For the first time since she found herself chained, A quiet sob ripped from her throat, muffled quickly as she buried her face into her arms. Sadness, desperation, and rage all rolled into one. Her shoulders trembled, but she forced herself to stay silent. If they saw this—if they saw her like this—force only knew what would happen. Yet, she couldn't stop the tears from slipping through her fingers or the way her body shook with the weight of everything she had lost. She had fought so hard. And for what? To end up here, trapped in the dark, battered and broken?
Footsteps.
Azzie's breath caught, and in an instant, the tears were gone. Her fingers wiped furiously at her damp cheeks before she pushed herself upright, leaning back against the wall as if she had never moved. Her face hardened, jaw tightening, eyes sharp despite the exhaustion dragging at her limbs. Whoever it was, whatever they wanted—she was ready. Or at least, she had to be.
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