Kyoki said:
Rin cringed back at the sight of an impatient Shosa. "E- etto... Miharu is in... workable... condition. It is far from optimal. We require a dock to do much more," she answered, delivering the fairly bad news. She felt as if she was in a bit of danger, since she was telling the Shosa this and Yukari didn't seem to be in the best of moods.
"G- gomenasai, Shosa," the sprite squeaked out quietly and nervously.
Yukari shook her head. Her mood was sour, but it would not be taken out on a crewmember who had nothing to do with it. More important matters would press her very soon, she was sure.
"A dock you will not have, but time is perhaps something we will have some of." She slipped her datapad from her lap pocket, checked something, then nodded. "Return to your duties, Rin-Hei, and do your best. I suggest finding Freeman-Juni and speaking with him."
A small bow, and Rin was off, leaving Yukari alone in the port multifunction bay of
Miharu.
Frustration burbled up toward the top of her psyche, and she had no immediate outlet. For now, the recruits had found the Juni, the ship remained under repair, and if the update from
Miharu was correct, Takuma-Heisho was being demoted to Takuma-Hei. She was relieved Nyton was handling that affair; she was in no mood to suffer the computer expert's demotion.
Her eyes crossed over the empty bay's shiny black floor until they reached the armory. Her fingers flexed; her arms longed for a familiar weight. Unfamiliar, she corrected herself, but some day she hoped it would be intimately recognized. An opportunity to adapt herself to the rubbery grip and the feel of the wood against her cheek.
Few moments passed before it was in her hands. Her silent tool. She could move it left and right, but no sound it made, so tight were the manufacturing tolerances. It weighed several kilograms, yet felt heavier than Tom did in her arms. It spoke to her in such a quiet whisper ... but each word was a death sentence. For someone. "Occupant," perhaps.
"Nekovalkyrja," she said quietly. "Bred to kill. Bred to die. A war ends, another begins. Without war, we are without meaning." She squeezed the trigger. The sound was clear as the most flawless diamond, signaling a mechanism that broke as easily as scored glass.
Bolt up, pull back, push forward, bolt down. Acquire. Aim. Eliminate. Nearly half an hour passed. Hundreds died.
Yukari's datapad brought her out of her affair with the rifle and its empty chamber. The rifle was carefully set on the ground, and she examined the messages. It appeared a sanctioned bout between Hinoto and Nimura had resulted in Nyton doing her job for her. No punishments were delivered, which her summary suggested was proper.
But it suggested that the time for downtime was over. It was time to get to work. Soldiers needed orders, so she would provide; it was what Kotori would do.
Telepathy would much more clearly convey the push underlying her words. She decided to put the messages through
Miharu, to effectively reach the crew. First things were first.
"Junko-Hei, this is the Shosa. Please collect some of your other crewmates who are not busy and set up the computer cores we collected from Bowhordia in Miharu's Port Multifunction Bay. Ask Freeman-Juni for extra help if you cannot find enough on your own. Quickly, please, and thank you."
Then, Miyoko.
"Heisho. Please collect Takuma-Hei and report to Miharu's Port Multifunction Bay. He has been recently demoted, but he must still examine the computer cores collected from Bowhordia. Your skills could assist him in examining and interpreting the data. The cores will be waiting for you. Thank you."
Finally, Masako.
"Juni. I apologize for intruding, but have you scheduled a brief simulation with the new recruits? They perhaps would benefit from experiencing the variety of opponents they will face as a part of our crew. I am free to assist you, if you require it."