age of rebellion
5 Weeks Ago
Treicolt Homestead, Concord Dawn
Tansu Treicolt
Rain pattered upon a fertile ground outside the walls of the shack where the twin's ships were housed. A pair of booted feet stuck out from beneath the X-wing, but no clatter of tools could be heard. The mechanic had laid aside her wrench, staring upward to iron and wire, contemplating. Rain meant work to be done in the morning. The bantha had been put to bed before the storm, and would need to be brought back to pasture in the morning. Washed up rows would need to be tidied and replanted. It was a routine Talin knew like takeoff. Just as their siblings before them, since she and Tansu were old enough to hold a tool, they had been put to work. Life on the Treicolt homestead was only easy for visitors. Maybe why Auteme kept returning. With a sign, the blonde grabbed an oil rag, wiped her hands, and slid from beneath the starship. She couldn't hide forever; and as jealous as she was of their core-dwelling visitor, she wouldn't miss the dinner or the stories that came with it.
The wall of water had shifted to a lazy drizzle by the time she had trekked over the fields and back to the house. It was a warm summer rain, for which she had to be thankful. It offered perspective. Last night's table had grown rowdy. Anytime they hosted, the flock of three grown returned to the nest from across the sector. Being the youngest, they couldn't partake in many of the revelries; but politeness didn't keep her brothers from the whiskey, Aunt Auteme drank socially, and even dad had been convinced as the night went on. Tales of the senate floor and hundred story huttaburgers subtly shifted into that of the old days. Guts, glory, and adventure littered each. Ryv leading to every other charge. Auteme and the force, old pals. Mom and Dad walking up hill both ways, in a humid jungle, with only 10 men and taking a city unawares. With every word, Talin sunk deeper into a sea of envy. It was everything the seventeen year old girl desired, but only a shadow of it.
Tonight's dinner came and went without further incidence. Dad had been reminded his youth was fleeting with a nasty hangover and swore at the boys with the mention of liquor. With mischievous smiles, they shrugged, and departed with bottle in tow. Mom and dad went about setting the kitchen right, and Auteme took an early retirement to her room to catch up on work. Talin found her sister sprawled on the couch. The pair locked eyes, and needing no words for another well known routine, made their own exit.
A pair of speeders sat beneath a rainport, though they needed no further protection. The weather has cleared, the clouds inching toward the east and leaving a brilliant moon behind. Wordlessly, the elder launched her bike down the route. It followed the pasture fence out, to the small creek which separated their property from the rest of the planet. The bantha may have been up, but there was always risk of a stray, and the Tip-Yips were only protected from predator by a small dome of wire. Best to check before bed - and best to get away and clear the head. Talin pushed the speeder. Leaning deeply, thr wind chaffed against her cheeks, golden locks reaching for her sister behind her. Their land flew by in an emerald blur. The fence came to a halt, and she slowed to a stop just before their normal turn. When the freckled face turned back to her twin, it was painted with longing.
"We should go further." She expressed. "It's been a year since we got grounded, and the most they let us do it take eggs to town and fly, with escort." Her voice twisted with insolence, mocking their father's baritone.
"I mean, come on, man! When they were our age, they were fighting a war, and falling in love, and had already passed their karkin' trials! We get picked up by sector police one time, and they just what, lock us up and throw away the key?! I mean, as if they never went podracing!"
The words had grown into a shout as she flailed her arms at the injustice.
"Come on, maybe if we get in trouble again, they'll just get so tired of us they ship us back with Auteme! I'll bet Cabbage could hook us up at the casino. A little gambling, eh, that would really rear their high horse."
Treicolt Homestead, Concord Dawn
Tansu Treicolt
Rain pattered upon a fertile ground outside the walls of the shack where the twin's ships were housed. A pair of booted feet stuck out from beneath the X-wing, but no clatter of tools could be heard. The mechanic had laid aside her wrench, staring upward to iron and wire, contemplating. Rain meant work to be done in the morning. The bantha had been put to bed before the storm, and would need to be brought back to pasture in the morning. Washed up rows would need to be tidied and replanted. It was a routine Talin knew like takeoff. Just as their siblings before them, since she and Tansu were old enough to hold a tool, they had been put to work. Life on the Treicolt homestead was only easy for visitors. Maybe why Auteme kept returning. With a sign, the blonde grabbed an oil rag, wiped her hands, and slid from beneath the starship. She couldn't hide forever; and as jealous as she was of their core-dwelling visitor, she wouldn't miss the dinner or the stories that came with it.
The wall of water had shifted to a lazy drizzle by the time she had trekked over the fields and back to the house. It was a warm summer rain, for which she had to be thankful. It offered perspective. Last night's table had grown rowdy. Anytime they hosted, the flock of three grown returned to the nest from across the sector. Being the youngest, they couldn't partake in many of the revelries; but politeness didn't keep her brothers from the whiskey, Aunt Auteme drank socially, and even dad had been convinced as the night went on. Tales of the senate floor and hundred story huttaburgers subtly shifted into that of the old days. Guts, glory, and adventure littered each. Ryv leading to every other charge. Auteme and the force, old pals. Mom and Dad walking up hill both ways, in a humid jungle, with only 10 men and taking a city unawares. With every word, Talin sunk deeper into a sea of envy. It was everything the seventeen year old girl desired, but only a shadow of it.
Tonight's dinner came and went without further incidence. Dad had been reminded his youth was fleeting with a nasty hangover and swore at the boys with the mention of liquor. With mischievous smiles, they shrugged, and departed with bottle in tow. Mom and dad went about setting the kitchen right, and Auteme took an early retirement to her room to catch up on work. Talin found her sister sprawled on the couch. The pair locked eyes, and needing no words for another well known routine, made their own exit.
A pair of speeders sat beneath a rainport, though they needed no further protection. The weather has cleared, the clouds inching toward the east and leaving a brilliant moon behind. Wordlessly, the elder launched her bike down the route. It followed the pasture fence out, to the small creek which separated their property from the rest of the planet. The bantha may have been up, but there was always risk of a stray, and the Tip-Yips were only protected from predator by a small dome of wire. Best to check before bed - and best to get away and clear the head. Talin pushed the speeder. Leaning deeply, thr wind chaffed against her cheeks, golden locks reaching for her sister behind her. Their land flew by in an emerald blur. The fence came to a halt, and she slowed to a stop just before their normal turn. When the freckled face turned back to her twin, it was painted with longing.
"We should go further." She expressed. "It's been a year since we got grounded, and the most they let us do it take eggs to town and fly, with escort." Her voice twisted with insolence, mocking their father's baritone.
"I mean, come on, man! When they were our age, they were fighting a war, and falling in love, and had already passed their karkin' trials! We get picked up by sector police one time, and they just what, lock us up and throw away the key?! I mean, as if they never went podracing!"
The words had grown into a shout as she flailed her arms at the injustice.
"Come on, maybe if we get in trouble again, they'll just get so tired of us they ship us back with Auteme! I'll bet Cabbage could hook us up at the casino. A little gambling, eh, that would really rear their high horse."
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