Schmarmee listened to
80Y
's choppy replies. He wasn't surprised that he could barely understand the droid's attempts at diagnosing his issues. The rodian made his way toward the ship they'd be commandeering. An
XS Stock Light Freighter.
::EE—o-o-o-oout of here! Make ——ma-—make it! — FR:: he proclaimed again and again.
::Y——— your own —— rO — Ro—— own — dian. —Fr— dian—ee ::
"We are, we are leaving," Schmarmee assured his friend. The ramp to the ship was lowered and Schmarmee made his way up. He placed 80Y's head down at the top of the ramp, facing out toward the hanger. It felt rude to place his head any further inside the ship. Even though everything the droid said came out as a half-discernable mess, Schmarmee wanted to be able to hear his friend if he needed something.
"I will be right back."
Schmarmee paused as he slowly stepped off the ramp and his feet touched the hangar floor. His eyes looked at Jericho, the droid's torso, and then back to the human. Schmarmee's dark purple eyes narrowed. He walked toward Jericho, carefully stepping around Garock and 80Y's body as it continued to spark and spasm. The twitching was beginning to slow down and become less erratic. Schmarmee assumed it was just too damaged to continue much longer. The rodian paused after the thought, then turned toward the droid instead.
Deciding not to let the 80Y's body damage itself any further, Schmarmee carefully stepped close to it. After dodging a flailing arm, he was able to deactivate the droid. It continued to stutter until finally freezing. Gravity lowered the bent limbs to the floor. The occasional spark still occurred, but Schmarmee was no longer worried about being zapped.
Schmarmee sighed. He wondered if 80Y's head was still active as he stepped over Garock.
The rodian cautiously approached Jericho when only a few feet between them remained. He stared at the man's back silently as he listened to his labored breathing. Slowly, Schmarmee leaned over the man to see his face. Jericho's eyes were mostly blocked by his messy blond bangs but the rodian could tell they were closed.
Schmarmee unholstered one of his blasters. He nudged the tip against Jericho's shoulder before quickly jerking away. Other than Schmarmee almost swaying too far backward, still not fully recovered from 80Y's earlier scream, nothing happened. After a pause, Schmarmee nudged the man's shoulder again. Jericho slowly rolled onto his back with a grimace.
He's conscious, Schmarmee noted.
The human's eyes opened a fraction of an inch. He and the rodian locked eyes. Schmarmee watched as Jericho just laid there for a moment, unable to do much else. Until he finally spoke.
"Do it al-... ready," Jericho panted out.
"What?" Schmarmee asked immediately, wide-eyed and confused.
Jericho took a moment to respond, almost looking as if he could have laughed if he wasn't on the brink of death.
"Finish... the job. You can't... I bet.."
Schmarmee's eyes remained huge purple pools before narrowing. He held the blaster pistol at his side. Everything felt so surreal as Jericho bullied him even when at his mercy.
"...What you said before. Is it true? That I was sold?"
"Like it matters," Jericho breathed.
"It does matter. It matters to me." The rodian inched forward, intent on getting an answer as his grip tightened on the blaster handle. It stayed at Schmarmee's side, however. There was no reason to threaten Jericho with it when he had already been shot twice, and the third would be an undeserved act of mercy. But whether as an act of mercy or an act of revenge, the thought of ending Jericho's life didn't sit right with the rodian. Schmarmee's eyes darted off to the side, internal conflict evident. This human had never done anything good for him, but... He was housed and fed and paid, although not very well. If he was a slave, then...
"Why did you pay me and treat me like the others if I was a slave?"
Jericho's labored breaths were the only sound in the hangar besides the rodian's words. Even though he looked like he could pass out at any second, Jericho found the energy to look at Schmarmee like he was stupid.
"If you knew, you'd... even-tually try to leave. But you didn’t. Tossing you a few credits... To keep you in line. Was easy," Jericho panted out with a slowly emerging smirk.
"I got my credits worth..." The human then frowned slowly.
"Until now."
There was a long silence. Jericho took his time catching his breath. Schmarmee just stared at him, Gradually, his grip loosened on the blaster. The rodian's fingers twitched.
"... It is that simple?" Schmarmee asked in disbelief. He knew Jericho was credit-driven and overall a lousy human being. Honestly, flat-out one of the worst sentient beings that the rodian had ever met, period. Schmarmee didn't know what he was expecting. For some reason, he was expecting
more. More of
what, he wasn't sure.
"Don't hafta be hard."
The rodian wished he knew the words to explain how he felt. Not that Jericho would care. He squinted at the human, pale green fingers flexing around the handle of his D-12. Schmarmee's shoulders tensed.
"Do it, sleemo," Jericho practically whispered as he stared down the rodian.
For a brief moment, Schmarmee wondered how he'd feel if he did. He pictured the moment in his mind. It didn't make him feel good. He thought about why, even as Jericho quietly called him a coward under shaky breaths. For once, maybe for the very first time, Schmarmee was in control. He was in control of the man that bought him, tricked him, and treated him like dirt. The man who did nothing but insult him and degrade him despite
needing him. Schmarmee wasn't sure if Jericho deserved death. But he did deserve to finally suffer some consequences.
Schmarmee sighed. His shoulders relaxed. Jericho continued to grumble more insults in an attempt at a swift death that wouldn't come. The blaster was slowly snaked into its holster.
"You are... A sad, small man. Nothing will ever be enough for you." Schmarmee stared down at Jericho with a sorrowful look in his eyes.
"You deserve every bad thing that happens to you."
Schmarmee turned away, uninterested in any 'final words' he'd be getting from the human. It was hard to focus or hear in general at the moment. The rodian almost felt like he was in a dream as he easily, and almost unwillingly, ignored Jericho's complaints. An easy task since they were more akin to mumbled background noise. He knew the human was angry and desperate. Schmarmee could feel it in his chest. The same feeling he had felt every time he was made to believe he messed up big time or was made to doubt himself. It was grounding, in a way. The only thing that actually felt real at the moment. Touching the cool surface of the droid's body plating also felt real. But even as Schmarmee hauled the droid's torso up the ramp and aboard the ship, his head still felt like he was dreaming.
The loading ramp was raised without thought. Schmarmee didn't look back. After a few seconds or perhaps minutes, the rodian slumped into the pilot's seat. Flying was easy. He did it before. Many times. The controls felt slightly askew, maybe left of center by a fraction of an inch. Schmarmee stared for a moment before deciding to do what felt right.
The XS Stock Light Freighter left the atmosphere of Adrathorpe at 1:53:10.