Epiphany
Proverbs 17:9
Kestrel huffed slightly as she hauled the crate across the landscape. The incoming ships added a time sensitivity to all of this, even more so than just having stolen a crate. She ground her teeth slightly at how quickly Adira and Silas' were up for dumping the crate. This was the whole reason they'd come here! On one hand, it was nice to have commanding officers that prioritized lives over loot. But that meant it fell on her to avoid putting them in the position of having to choose. And the best way she could do that was by making good time and getting the crate to where it needed to go.
So, for long minutes, her concentration of the surrounding environment dwindled to a narrow focus as she trusted her team would watch out for her. Instead, all of that concentration went into hustling with the crate. Iron-carbon bones and muscles took the weight but carrying something many times heavier than her body weight required a lot of rapid adjustment. Staying focused let her manage the crate and still make remarkably good time.
Seeing the Ambivalence in sight, Kestrel nodded once at Silas' direction and huffed her way towards the ship. Now that they were close, Kestrel spared a little attention for the drones she'd left behind. The micro-printer attached to her belt could fabricate more of the thumb-sized devices given some raw material. And frankly, she didn't have that much time for them to fly back from where she'd left them over those offices, providing surveillance. Instead, the brave little machines could do one last service for them.
Through her implant, she sent telemetric instructions to the hovering drones to congregate outside the office door. Then, one by one, she directed them to overload and collide with the door. If anyone out there was trying to track energy signatures, each spike would look like a weapon's discharge. And if the half dozen managed to actually damage the door, it could very well trigger any sensory or alarm systems not already set off.
"Good work, my little friends," she said wistfully to herself. Then Kestrel put all of her attention back on getting the crate onto their ship.
So, for long minutes, her concentration of the surrounding environment dwindled to a narrow focus as she trusted her team would watch out for her. Instead, all of that concentration went into hustling with the crate. Iron-carbon bones and muscles took the weight but carrying something many times heavier than her body weight required a lot of rapid adjustment. Staying focused let her manage the crate and still make remarkably good time.
Seeing the Ambivalence in sight, Kestrel nodded once at Silas' direction and huffed her way towards the ship. Now that they were close, Kestrel spared a little attention for the drones she'd left behind. The micro-printer attached to her belt could fabricate more of the thumb-sized devices given some raw material. And frankly, she didn't have that much time for them to fly back from where she'd left them over those offices, providing surveillance. Instead, the brave little machines could do one last service for them.
Through her implant, she sent telemetric instructions to the hovering drones to congregate outside the office door. Then, one by one, she directed them to overload and collide with the door. If anyone out there was trying to track energy signatures, each spike would look like a weapon's discharge. And if the half dozen managed to actually damage the door, it could very well trigger any sensory or alarm systems not already set off.
"Good work, my little friends," she said wistfully to herself. Then Kestrel put all of her attention back on getting the crate onto their ship.