in my own ashes
Plucked from multitudes of mechanical dross, an alluvial dampener occupied the grasp of a pit droid. With a series of inquiring chirps, the diminutive droid presented the component to the scrapyard's most recent customer.
"I said an actuator. You know, for repulsor drives?" Dax reiterated his request, a twinge of waning patience in his voice.
A low drone of disappointment came from the droid, its grip lowering back to its waist. It gave a hopeful head turn toward one of its mechanical kin who moved its gaze and timidly presented a small component of its own, an accelerator sized for single-occupant landspeeders.
"No." With vexation, Dax rubbed a hand over his face.
Harmonizing chirps came from the pair of droids, resonating the same disappointment.
"Okay, what about a heatsink?" He hoped something as ubiquitous as a heatsink would be easy for even the pair of DUM-series automatons to identify. "The coiled kind, about this big." A gesture with his thumb and index finger indicated the approximate dimensions.
Both pit droids beeped binary enthusiastically, nodding their heads and dropping each of their offerings carelessly to the ground. They scrambled up one of the scrapyard's many mountains of metallic detritus, sending various morsels of junk tumbling down in their wake. Every few feet, they'd dig into the pile in search of Dax's requested part. A third came and joined the effort, called by beckoning the whistles and thrums of binary.
"I need as many as you can find," Dax called out, descending a path of refuse mulch and nut-and-bolt gravel. Before disappearing around another scrap hill, he caught one of the droids falling into one of the holes they'd dug, only to be covered by a metal avalanche. As the other pit droids panicked and began digging, Dax shook his head and turned away. Scanning the face of the nearest mound, Dax resolved to search for a repulsor actuator himself. Otherwise, he wasn't getting off Castell for a while.
The BD unit on his shoulder pitched an unimpressed string of binary.
"Yeah, you're telling me," Dax replied.
BD-9 whistled more binary into Dax's ear, pitch undulating curiously.
"Be glad you aren't a pit droid, Nine."
BD-9 replied with a sound that mimicked a human hum of agreement.
Dax moved from mound to mound, sifting through any promising pile of junk he could find. All he could find was a cornucopia of things he didn't need: microvalves, naviscopes, catalyzers, even flux stabilizers. Not to mention countless parts so burned out and torn up he could hardly identify them. Frustrated, Dax ceased his search and sat upon a large cooling fin jutting from the nearest mound. A sip from his canteen washed away the grit and dust that had gotten past his lips from all the digging.
"Looks like we're gonna be here for a while," Dax conceded.
BD-9 scanned their surroundings, optical sensor focused on a point to their left. Excited chirping got Dax's attention, and he quickly tried to match where BD-9 was facing. A copper-green glitter caught Dax's eye beneath a cover of miscellaneous parts. Neuranium? he wondered. Repulsor actuators that fit his ship often had a grounding component of exposed Neuranium. Dax stood up, scrambled over a few low mounds of metallic waste, and toward the warm glare he'd seen earlier. Reaching out, he freed the component from the mound. It was exactly what he'd been looking for.