132 (born March 9, 2036) was a female born on Greyson Station as part of an experiment on the effects of low gravity on children raised in space. She was one of hundreds of numbered children bred and raised without names, families, or legal personhood. Sold into slavery after the project collapsed, she spent years enduring sexual abuse and forced labor aboard various ships and outposts across the outer solar system. Known only by her number, 132 became a silent,competent mechanic with no concept of freedom or self-worth. In 2059, she was discovered by Captain Jake Steele in a shipment aboard the Valiant. Steele purchased her from her intended buyer and kept her aboard the Valiant, where her journey of healing began.
| Born | Mar 9, 2036 |
| Sex | Female |
| Ethnicity | Mixed |
| Affiliation | Valiant |
| Occupation | Mechanic |
| Marital Status | Unmarried |
| Religion | None - Personal Superstitions |
| Portrayed By |
Biography
Early Life

132 was born on March 9, 2036, aboard Greyson Station, a research facility orbiting Jupiter. She was one of hundreds of children created as part of a long-term study on the developmental effects of low gravity on human physiology. The program, privately funded and ethically unregulated, involved artificial conception and systematic rearing of genetically screened embryos in isolation from society.
Subjects were assigned numbers in place of names, denied familial bonds, and raised with only clinical human contact. 132 never knew parents, affection, or identity. Her cognitive education was advanced and utilitarian.
132 and her cohort were considered by the corporation as research property, with no citizenship or rights under the law.
Enslavement and Captivity

In 2045, when 132 was nine years old, the Greyson Station program collapsed due to loss of funding, growing political scrutiny, and escalating instability on Earth following the outbreak of World War III. With no oversight and dwindling resources, the station’s private operators liquidated their assets, including the children. The test subjects were sold to whoever would take them: smugglers, warlords, scavengers, and private contractors.
132 was trafficked into the outer-system black market and cycled through a brutal network of buyers. Over the next decade and a half, she was passed from ship to ship. Her small size made her ideal for crawling through maintenance shafts or working near live conduits.
She endured degrading violations. Some of her captors used her for menial labor; others abused her for their own gratification. She was starved when rations were low, beaten when she hesitated, and drugged or restrained when she showed resistance.
Realizing that her only currency was utility, 132 began watching how things worked. She started with fixing simple equipment, but as her competence grew, she worked on more complex systems. Eventually, even captains began recognizing her value—“the quiet girl who keeps the reactor running.” Her aptitude for machines became her only shield.
By her late teens, 132 no longer questioned her condition. She had no memory of freedom. She had never had a choice. She believed she was a tool, no more entitled to liberty than a wrench or a fuel cell. The idea of ownership felt natural. A slave was simply what she was. She was 132. And she belonged to whoever paid for her.
Rescue and Life Aboard the Valiant

In 2059, while running operations near Jupiter, Captain Jake Steele of the Valiant discovered an unusual shipment in the cargo manifest of a rundown station. Upon investigation, he found a sealed crate containing a young woman—Subject 132—chained, underfed, and terrified. The crate was en route to yet another buyer, part of a trafficking chain that had passed her from one owner to the next.
Jake alerted the crew, and together they helped remove her from confinement. After a group discussion, they agreed that Jake should negotiate her purchase to prevent her from falling into further abuse. Though she remained legally a slave under post-war frontier law, the Valiant crew treated her with dignity—providing clothes, personal space, and a degree of autonomy she had never known.
To 132, this unexpected kindness was not comforting. It was confusing. Trust did not come naturally, and safety felt like a trick. She accepted the provisions without gratitude, not out of disrespect, but because she didn’t believe kindness was real.
Key Dates
- 2036 – Born
- 2059 – 132 discovered in shipment and brought aboard the Valiant
Appendicies
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