It had been, what, three months? Maybe four since he had woken up in a hospital bed on an alien planet, two since he'd learned their language. Only a couple weeks since he'd left them for greater vistas and to find some kind of purpose in life.
He'd only the memory of the past couple months in his memory, everything else was a blur. It was almost as though he was born an adult, thrown into existence only to experience confusion. At least that's how it seemed, it was event after event with him.
A woman on a train who had shot him in the chest, which was nice.
Suffocating in space and waking up in a hospital bed, which was nice.
And then an engagement with an evil space empire's scout ship.
Which was nice.
They had demanded he disarm and allow them to board his ship. Somehow their polite request wasn't convincing enough to make him disarm, and there was a short lived dogfight that ended in the pair of them crashing on a nearby planet. It was lucky that it had a breathable atmosphere, otherwise he'd have much worse problems than repairing his ship.
After waking up in the wreckage of his ship, Dunnaman crawled out and found that the crew of the other ship didn't survive. It was convenient, because he passed out again and didn't awaken for another few hours. Night had fallen when his eyes finally opened again, he was exhausted and pretty badly bruised up. Passing out isn't particularly restful, so he was just as tired as ever.
Though he was tired, he was worried about starvation and dehydration. These are things that he really didn't want to deal with, especially while stranded on a planet that he wasn't native to. Dunnaman began work on pulling his ship out of the crater, grumbling and muttering to himself about how he always has to put up some some dumb incident.
It would be a terrible inconvenience to suddenly find out that this planet has unfriendly native life, even worse if there was unfriendly non-native life. The thought of another ship was terrifying, and he began nervously working at twice the pace, sweat pouring from his brow and down his face.
What a terrible day.
He'd only the memory of the past couple months in his memory, everything else was a blur. It was almost as though he was born an adult, thrown into existence only to experience confusion. At least that's how it seemed, it was event after event with him.
A woman on a train who had shot him in the chest, which was nice.
Suffocating in space and waking up in a hospital bed, which was nice.
And then an engagement with an evil space empire's scout ship.
Which was nice.
They had demanded he disarm and allow them to board his ship. Somehow their polite request wasn't convincing enough to make him disarm, and there was a short lived dogfight that ended in the pair of them crashing on a nearby planet. It was lucky that it had a breathable atmosphere, otherwise he'd have much worse problems than repairing his ship.
After waking up in the wreckage of his ship, Dunnaman crawled out and found that the crew of the other ship didn't survive. It was convenient, because he passed out again and didn't awaken for another few hours. Night had fallen when his eyes finally opened again, he was exhausted and pretty badly bruised up. Passing out isn't particularly restful, so he was just as tired as ever.
Though he was tired, he was worried about starvation and dehydration. These are things that he really didn't want to deal with, especially while stranded on a planet that he wasn't native to. Dunnaman began work on pulling his ship out of the crater, grumbling and muttering to himself about how he always has to put up some some dumb incident.
It would be a terrible inconvenience to suddenly find out that this planet has unfriendly native life, even worse if there was unfriendly non-native life. The thought of another ship was terrifying, and he began nervously working at twice the pace, sweat pouring from his brow and down his face.
What a terrible day.