Desna
History
If Desna had ever had dreams, abandoning them was not only inevitable—an adults' world killing the girlishness in her—it was naked survival. For on Venus there is no travel but for what brings one closer to a whalefall and all its half-slagged treasures, no art save for what can be sold offworld. Only maggots, living maggots beset upon durasteel carcasses. Sectioning and chewing and repurposing. Where other places' mothers seek to enrich their children—with opportunity, with education—that they might one day return and enrich their families and communities in kind—the Venutian mother sends them away hoping to never see them again; never to reminisce, those children, never to feel the longing ache of homesickness. For what livelihoods could they hope to return to? Cutter, melter, or scrapjack. Rivetman or keelbreak. (Or one other, if a long span arrives where there is nothing fallen to the sands, naught to salvage; but so as the Venutians hesitate to speak of that, so should we.) Any gig would have sufficed, in truth. Cooking aboard an Ad Astra cruise liner, maybe; or hauling and dumping the very same wrecks on which the dregs of Venus subsist. That a freight and logistics company was the first of maybe thirty applications to reach out with an interview was only happenstance. Still, Desna already had experience operating tunnelers and sand crawlers and a few other heavy machines, so earning her Mikeys proved trivial enough, even for someone as roughspun and uneducated as she. She knew the precariousness of her position—knew if she screwed it up there were a thousand others lined up vying to take her place—so for a couple years Desna worked hard and stayed loyal. Long hours, and she was always picking up more. Not that she minded. What few satellite apartments she could afford they seemed a waste of money anyway, what with her spending three weeks every six on the road. Why pay rent for a roof she barely ever slept under, why pay utilities on water and power she didn't get to use?—so she never let much time pass between hauls. Never handed in her rig. Simply hooked up the next train and went back out again. Over time she gutted out the cabin of all its extremities and filled it in again with all her little touches. Posters, fun ashtrays picked up here and there, potted plants. Oh, how she loved her plants (had never seen any before going starbound, after all). Her ryegrass and her thale cress, nasturtiums and dwarf peas. And she got to listen to her music, sleep on her schedule, eat whatever she wanted, and the work may have been hard and long and filthy but it wasn't all bad. Very soon the ship was her home. So when the disillusionment started it started small. Insidious. Noticing if she bought the expensive clamshelled microwave dinners instead of the cheap styro ones sometimes she'd be rationing the last of her cigarettes at month's end. That if she splurged for the fancy water-retaining flower feeds she had to skip every other cyberbooster shot. That she was patching and taping her boots instead of buying new ones. That sorta thing. It didn't make sense with how far she'd trimmed back her cost-of-living, but there it was. She tried just about every polite recourse; every legal, HR-approved avenue of conflict resolution. She'd ask for a raise, or if not a raise then at least for commuting hours between gigs to count toward overtime, because she was still moving the ship wasn't she, it wasn't personal time or any kind of vacation, she was still keeping company property safe from thieves and asteroid dings, still keeping insurance premiums down with her squeaky-clean driving record, no tickets, no accidents. No dice, of course. So she'd backpedal, saying at the very least, at the very least, she wanted a PPE stipend, because she was sick of buying new boots and new jumpsuits out of pocket. But it always ended the same way; they'd say, well, DeeDee (that was her radio callsign, DeeDee), if you have enough money for booze and cigarettes then you must be making off alright ("making off," like she was a fucking thief for even asking, like she was the villain for being there for the paycheck and not for the love of the company). And it was always the way they said it, their tones dripping with insinuation like she was taking advantage of them. And every time she had to bite her tongue it tasted slightly bitterer. Until eventually the resentment became something she couldn't bury anymore, couldn't ignore like a toothache too expensive to bring to the dentbot for filling. A little time theft here, a little drinking on the clock there, nicking company supplies, these made Desna feel better but didn't amount to much in the way of her due compensation. It was through her coworkers that she found her answer. See, she had known more or less her entire stint at QuadOptimum that some of them had a kind of side-gig going on. From the way they whispered, glancing over their shoulders, she knew not to inquire; not to pry; not if she was going to make enemies out of it, and the retaliation was going to bite her back in the worst of ways. Even so, spending all that time onloading and offloading, invoicing and pre-flight-checking, she was bound to notice sooner than not. When the supes and the foremen weren't in, these coworkers would switch off the warehouse cameras and load up other, surreptitious goods alongside the legitimate; goods which didn't appear on the bills-of-lading; ones they were most particular about stashing well out of sight, behind dozens and dozens of freight containers, in odd corners and little latched alcoves. These illicit shipments and deliveries added trivial minutes to their ETAs if any at all, but made the drivers thousands, sometimes tens of thousands of heliodollars in a single round trip. They were, in the simplest terms, mules: each taking what seemed the merest modicum of risk, but raking it in big. All Desna had to do was convince the right people she was on the level (ie. not a company narc); get connected; do what she was already doing, just with one or two more little stops on the way; and finally she wouldn't have to merely survive anymore but could finally live. It worked, and on her next delivery, stowed among box after box of Grabbitz!™, the latest collect-'em-all vinyl figure craze, were a dozen small crates of bootleg infolink cracking kits. And all she had to do was play it cool through the Anchor checkpoints, and leave a certain side door to her rig unlocked in a certain hangar at a certain time, and a certain someone would go inside for an inspection, and the contraband would be out of her hands and on the next ship before she could even fret about it. And Desna's eyes bulged when she checked the number on the debit chit awaiting her beneath her floormats (just where the very nice man had said it would be), and she used the money to buy an expensive bourbon to celebrate, and whiskey had never tasted so sweet. Ten months later, wearing a robin's-egg-cyan jumpsuit, the shackles chafing her ankles and the gavel gleaming under hot yellow lights, she considered blaming those coworkers for putting the idea in her head with their nice landcars, their shiny cybernetics that never jammed or stuck. She considered blaming QuadOptimum; the wage theft, the deduction of "wasteful and fraudulent" fuel use from her paystubs, simple managerial embezzlement, all these things she was so sure were happening but couldn't prove. She considered blaming a society which had made it too expensive to live and then punished everyone who refused to roll over and rot. But in the end she plead guilty, and so began her life as a criminal. Blacklisted from her industry of expertise; unemployable, except as min-wage grunt labor. Getting herself thrown back in almost as quickly as the wardens could process her release papers because at least in the slammer there was work, there were lights, there were heaters, clean water, food, medcare. No longer a mere jaywalking dilettante but a true-blue, in-and-out yardbird. | ____________________________________________________________________________
◤ “That's the fuck of it all, eh, kid? They make it too expensive to live, but illegal to die. Then when they catch you living on the street slurping out of soup cans, it's not the rich guy in the suit who put you there what they throw into irons. Pseesh. Sometimes it seems like the only way to win the game was to never a been born at all.”

Full Name: Desna Anavansi Age: 64 Homeworld: Venus [Terrestrial] Occupation: [Formerly] Scrounger, Deep Space Freight Trucker (Class-B//Long-Haul, Subsystem), Warehouse Thief, Fence, Chaingang Hydrogen Miner; [Currently] Astromechanical Engineer, Reserve Pilot Affiliation(s): Mt. Apollyona, Hooke's Crater, Venus, and its eponymous scrap-city; QuadOptimum Logistics LLC, later acquired by, and restructured into a subsidiary of, Celestinia Inc.; various small-time smuggling rings across the Inner System; Harald Zayd Station Orbital Corrections Facility

|
STRENGTHS GREASE MONKEY: When Phobos is 97 light-minutes behind you and Zenith-3 is still 84 minutes ahead, and there's a lead-lithium eutecticate leak gnawing its way through the arrestor manifold, and the red needle on the core temperature dial is creeping, creeping toward meltdown levels, do you retropropel down to contact speeds; fast-inject a neutron poison to cut the reaction?—send out an emergency beacon, drift in the void for days or weeks waiting for a tow, maybe run out of rations; get an earful from the client for delivering late, get an earful from the supes for putting in an insurance claim and jacking up the company's premiums? Or do you (figuratively) roll up your sleeves, (literally) climb into an HEV suit, and figure it out?
PILOT: Twenty three years hauling slag glass across the Inner System and not once did Desna sustain serious asteroid damage or get herself towed from Anchor starspace. Not even a single point on her license. She may not know the hammerhead turns or tailslides or very many fancy maneuvers whatsoever, but when it comes to avoiding collisions, space trash, and orbitcop attention she's one of the better warm bodies to stick in the captain's chair.
MAGPIE: Desna, through no desire or designs of her own, has over a lifetime cultivated the skills of a mediocre pinch, smuggler, and fence: improvising hidden compartments, glowering her way through weighstation checkpoints with hot contraband suitcased in the engine room, casing, sourcing, lifting, moving, shaking, sweating, and similar. Even a little lockpicking.
SHE-BULLOCK: Still deceptively strong for her age, even despite the plethora of old injuries and mystery-aches.
ENDLESSLY RESOURCEFUL: Desna almost never finds herself equipped with the right tools for a job. But her employers have always expected her to achieve more with less, and that's exactly what she does. Improvising, adapting, overcoming, at this point it's almost an art form. | LIMITATIONS OVER THE HILL: What she's earned in experiences and stories they will never compensate—not really—for the long, bitter war of attrition which time wages sooner or later on every joint and every muscle (but especially those not blessed with collagenide cures and cybernetic save-alls). Desna's fucking old. And every atmospheric reentry, with all its pressure shifts and isothermal shears, happily reminds her.
FUNCTIONALLY ILLITERATE: Desna's home planet doesn't have schools; teaching language arts and social studies to Venutian children all destined for the scrap heaps anyway, it would only waste time and precious liquid-ock supplies. Pearls before swine and such. And by the time she'd gone starbound she had addictions to feed, bills to pay, cheap cryoed meals to send down into a stomach which never seemed to stay full for quite long enough. (Not even mentioning the money she never quite got around to saving up and sending back to her family.) Indeed, Desna's teachers were pain, and mistakes, and hardship; effective enough in many respects but hardly preparing her for emails and memos, datacube novels and electrodramas.
SCRAP MAGGOT: Even before the prison tats, before the sewing-needle piercings, before the scleral icterus and the grease under the fingernails, Desna never would've sweet-talked her way onto a ritzy guestlist. Not past a valet rope, never the gangbridge of a Saturnian pleasure barge. The stench of poverty—of desperation—of struggle—this does not wash off as easily as a hard day's musk. Like the reek of Venus's sulfur gusts it seeps into every pore; becomes unconquerable. The loosening and smoothing and discoloring of teeth, the diminishing of hair, the spontaneous appearance of holes in old clothes. Because of these she will never hide. They will always know what she is...and what she will never be.
SHAKES & SHIVERS: Could be some untreated rheumatoid disease. Maybe the alcohol, maybe too much time in the cockpit, maybe too much unmitigated exposure to three suns' radiations and the toxic atmospheres of two dozen moons and planets over the decades (silent, their poisons—patient). Maybe just plain old age. Whatever the reason, Desna will never fire a pulsegun, drive a landbike, or pen a handwritten letter—at least not with any semblance of coordination or precision. |
 |