Jen
Well-Known Member
S L A U G H T E R
Nar Shaddaa
Shuttlebus 5189A
Red Sector to Hutta City
The rhythmic thumping of the old shuttlebus. The entrancing clanking of the repulsorlifts that carried it through the encumenopolis known as Nar Shaddaa, could have –had it not been for the noise from its passengers- been mistaken for an exotic lullaby. Two stripes of neon tubes ran along the ceiling, their red hue covering the faces of the commuters and the cart itself.
Jennifer, a twenty-something year old half-human, had been sitting in the shuttle for the last two hours, her leather boots comfortably resting on the seat opposite of hers. By now, the song of people boarding and disembarking from the bus had become a blur, the people a faceless mess. None of them mattered anyway. She let a hand run through her mid-neck long hair. It was dyed black, but the natural white color was starting to show at the roots. Soon enough she would have to dye it once again. She had not had the time, not between coding and trying to set up the heist.
Which, by the way, was why she had been sitting in the shuttlebus for so long, waiting. Through various back channels and chats that only the most skilled slicers knew about, she had put out an advertisement seeking companions, other slicers, that were willing to partake in a legendary run. The message had been simple:
"Assist me in karking the Horizons Technologies servers. Meet me on bus 5189A if interested, I will be wearing Anarchy. Credit pay provided for success, if necessary & if u think the challenge is not enough payment in itself."
She had posted it using the handle Phoenix. The name mostly known for having created the Cryptnet, running a good amount of hosting servers and bot nets as well as being the one to code the Happy_LifeDay Virus, it in turn being responsible for crashing two hundred thousand systems in a single day. She adjusted the oversized black hoodie she was wearing, a large white A painted on it.
Hopefully, those skilled enough to find the message would show up to talk about the gig. It was time to teach Horizons a lesson about invading people’s privacy.
Nar Shaddaa
Shuttlebus 5189A
Red Sector to Hutta City
The rhythmic thumping of the old shuttlebus. The entrancing clanking of the repulsorlifts that carried it through the encumenopolis known as Nar Shaddaa, could have –had it not been for the noise from its passengers- been mistaken for an exotic lullaby. Two stripes of neon tubes ran along the ceiling, their red hue covering the faces of the commuters and the cart itself.
Jennifer, a twenty-something year old half-human, had been sitting in the shuttle for the last two hours, her leather boots comfortably resting on the seat opposite of hers. By now, the song of people boarding and disembarking from the bus had become a blur, the people a faceless mess. None of them mattered anyway. She let a hand run through her mid-neck long hair. It was dyed black, but the natural white color was starting to show at the roots. Soon enough she would have to dye it once again. She had not had the time, not between coding and trying to set up the heist.
Which, by the way, was why she had been sitting in the shuttlebus for so long, waiting. Through various back channels and chats that only the most skilled slicers knew about, she had put out an advertisement seeking companions, other slicers, that were willing to partake in a legendary run. The message had been simple:
"Assist me in karking the Horizons Technologies servers. Meet me on bus 5189A if interested, I will be wearing Anarchy. Credit pay provided for success, if necessary & if u think the challenge is not enough payment in itself."
She had posted it using the handle Phoenix. The name mostly known for having created the Cryptnet, running a good amount of hosting servers and bot nets as well as being the one to code the Happy_LifeDay Virus, it in turn being responsible for crashing two hundred thousand systems in a single day. She adjusted the oversized black hoodie she was wearing, a large white A painted on it.
Hopefully, those skilled enough to find the message would show up to talk about the gig. It was time to teach Horizons a lesson about invading people’s privacy.