Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private 40 years and still going strong

The groan left the Sith like she’d just tasted the juiciest nerf steak. All from a nose scratch. Drama princess, Rheyla thought, rolling her eyes as a smirk tugged at her mouth—couldn’t help it.

She didn’t say anything. Eyes stayed on the hyperspace trail, one hand steady on the controls, the other loose near the throttle.

“Prom?” Rheyla snorted, eyes still on the controls. “Stars, that’s a mental image. Sith prom” A pause, then she fully turned in her seat, pushing her right Lek over her shoulder. "How would that even work? Slow dance before the murder starts? Aren't Sith all about emotion, sex, stabbing and stuff?” It was clear that Rheyla didn't know much about the Sith, just what she’d heard, or skimmed in passing..

She turned her gaze back to the consoles before her and flicked a few switches, adjusting their flight path, her tone deadpan as she exhaled, which sounded eerily like an offended huff. “And I don't do the "thing",” she said flatly. “I just like knowing where the sharp objects are in my cockpit.” She pointed out.

She glanced over again. Saw the Sithling sitting cross-legged like this was some kind of pleasure cruise. Too at home. Too relaxed.

And yet.

That last line—So I'll try not to disappoint you—hung in the air.

Rheyla didn’t bite.

Didn’t blink.

But the corner of her mouth curved, just barely.

“I’ll hold you to that, princess,” she said, low, cool, and amused.

She flipped a final switch, tone dry as dust.
“We’ll get there when we get there. You start whining, I’m strapping you to the galley table and feeding you cold ration bars.”

Beat.

“Or I eat the dinner I promised you” The corner of her mouth ticked upward. “Your call.”

~~~~​

The starlines collapsed in a blink.

Scourhawk dropped out of hyperspace with a jolt and a sharp whine, like she’d been yanked back to reality against her will.

Ahead, the planet came into view—dusky blue and tan, ringed with patchy clouds and a cluttered orbital belt of half-dead satellites and drifting junk. It wasn’t glamorous, but it wasn’t glowing either. Rheyla had been here before. Not often. Just enough to remember which ports charged extra for noise pollution and which ones didn’t ask questions.

She leaned forward, flicking a few switches as the console lit up with local traffic signals. Some in Basic. Some in… whatever passed for a dialect on this side of the Rim.

“Varneth,” she said flatly. “Population: enough to hide in, not enough to care.”

The descent started rough—just like she remembered. The clouds were thick, stained yellow at the edges. Scourhawk rattled as they cut through the atmosphere, panels humming under pressure. A few lights on the dash blinked angrily, but nothing she hadn’t ignored before.

She kept one hand steady on the controls, the other adjusting the flight stabilisers.

“No scans, no customs, no one shooting at us on entry,” she added. “We’re practically spoiled.”

Down below, the surface rolled out like a patchwork—rust-toned cities, weather-beaten spaceports, and distant stretches of farmland or waste. Hard to tell which from this height. Rheyla angled the ship toward one of the smaller ports—low-traffic, half-forgotten, and cheap on docking fees.

“Brace for charm,” she said, watching the pad ahead. “Landing struts tend to get shy when I bring guests.”

The ship banked hard. Thrusters flared. She lined up their descent over a landing grid that barely qualified as marked. Other ships squatted on the pad like stubborn drunks—freighters, cargo haulers, one old bucket that looked like it ran on prayers and leftover caf.

With a final hiss, Scourhawk touched down.

The engines whined, then fell quiet. The hull gave a lazy creak. Cooling metal ticked like a clock left running too long. Rheyla leaned back in her seat, exhaling. Then, as she looked over, she asked, “Still breathing, princess? Or did I land too soft for your taste?” There was a teasing bite to her question.

 
"You absolutely do the thing!" Scherezade laughed, "If 'the thing' were in the dictionary, it'd have your face next to it!"

The notion seemed to entertain her a lot more than it did Rheyla Tann Rheyla Tann though. It still took the Sithling a few moments to settle down from the mental image and stop giggling. And then she went quiet for the rest of the trip. After all, the Twi'lek had threatened to eat her food. Scherezade's emotional response to that was a lot more serious than the same response when it came as a reaction to someone trying to kill her.

Still, every so often, she shifted in her seat. The cuffs held steady and her wrists didn't test them, but her legs twisted this way and that. One could think she looked like someone practicing some bizarre form of spaceship yoga. Staying still without anything to focus on was rarely good for Scherezade… but she kept it mostly contained.

Varneth was a planet she had never heard of. That was okay though, there were plenty of those for anyone who didn't have a droid brain to remember them all. Still, she took note of the name and tucked it into a corner of her memory, making sure that if she ever wanted to come here for personal reasons, she could.

The ship went wild. Scherezade didn't scream, but she also didn't put any effort now into remaining in place. She was cuffed but not to the chair itself, and her body just bounced around as Rheyla tried to not let them crash. To someone who had no experience with Force User, it probably looked like she had already died in a crash and was just flying from one end of the cockpit to the other without any control. Someone with more experience would be able to safely assume that it was all intended. It was movement. Sure, the Sithling would have preferred to let her arms go wild as well, but beggars couldn't be choosers.

When they had finally stopped moving, her body slumped limp, the last jolt sending her face-first to the floor. One cuff had snapped from the violent impacts, freeing a hand. She turned on her back, breath ragged but satisfied, savouring the thrill of survival after the chaos. "You were perfect," she purred, and held her free hand up.

There was no knife in it. It wasn't moving in a way that indicated her about to attack with the Force. It just… hung there, for a moment.

"I think you want to fix this before we leave though," she grinned, behaving like the best target the 'verse had ever known. Then, with a sly smile, she scratched her nose with the other hand, all on her own.
 

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