Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private A Deal with the Devil, My Rules

Devil In A Tight Dress



Smoke billowed from the cigarette dangling lazily between Parvati's manicured fingers, the ash flicking off like a brief moment of fire that disappeared into the air. The heady aroma of tobacco mixed seamlessly with the intoxicating scent of her perfume, a blend of sensuality and danger. She took a slow sip of her whiskey, the distinct sound of a single ice cube scraping against the glass ringing through the near-silence of the VIP booth. She had paid extra for the noise-cancelling walls, today's mission was too important, too delicate, to leave room for prying ears. Whatever was going to unfold in this meeting would remain sealed in this space, with only those allowed access to the truth.

Outside the thick walls, the club thrummed with life, its pulse a constant hum, the rhythm of music and laughter, the shimmer of neon lights cutting through the smoke. The air was alive with energy, but to Parvati, it might as well have been a distant world. The muffled bass of the music, the soft clinks of glasses and the quiet hum of conversations, all of it reached her as little more than an inaudible buzz, a far-off memory of a place she could control but not feel. She was alone in her sanctuary, insulated from the noise that filled the rest of the club, the shifting crowd and fleeting glimpses of faces outside her domain. The isolation was deliberate- too many things could go wrong if too many people heard what was said in this room.

The club around her, though out of sight, was still vivid in her mind's eye. Denon was a place built for the reckless, the powerful, and the secretive. Outside the room, hidden figures gathered in dark corners, indulging in fleeting pleasures or dangerous liaisons, oblivious to the woman sitting alone in her well-guarded booth. It was a perfect backdrop for Parvati, a place where shadows met excess, where things could vanish without a trace. This isolation was a gift in itself, her quiet confidence in the midst of chaos.

Parvati's attire mirrored the atmosphere, both elegant and deadly. She wore a sleek, black leather bodysuit adorned with iridescent accents that gleamed when caught by the occasional flash of light through the soundproofed windows. Her leather trench coat, as always, hung loosely over her shoulders, its folds hiding hidden weapons, the subtle promise of lethal power. Her jet-black bob framed her face sharply, its sleek edges cutting accenting her fierce cheekbones.

Normally, Parvati would have orchestrated this little dance on her own turf, one of her many clubs, where every corner could be watched, every movement tracked. But this one was different. This time, the stakes were higher. She wasn't merely closing a deal or expanding her influence, no, she was preparing to align herself with something that walked the line between ally and threat. This was delicate, and Parvati knew the value of discretion. If things went south, she needed the freedom to escape without risking collateral damage, something nearly impossible in the confines of her own domain. She needed a place where the chaos of the galaxy could work to her advantage. Denon, with its unspoken threats and its dark corners, would provide the perfect cover.

The creature Parvati was meeting with wasn't new to her. The destruction Mr. Usher left behind during the wayfinder debacle still haunted the mistress's dreams, a reminder of the raw power and unpredictability it wielded. A hivemind, insatiable in its hunger for knowledge and control. Its actions were clear: it consumed, but not just physically. It took what it needed, bodies, memories, power, and manipulated everything in its path. But it wasn't mindless. No, it had its sights set on something far more dangerous: influence. Its fascination with the galaxy's power structures made it both a threat and, potentially, a useful tool.

The creature was slippery, though. Tracking it across the galaxy had been no easy task, but Parvati was no stranger to a challenge. She had kept an eye on any mention that might match its description, however unique. It had proven difficult to trace, but recently, there had been some grotesque discoveries around New Cov, disturbing events that matched Mr. Usher's particular brand of chaos. It was there that Parvati saw her opportunity.

You don't invite something like Mr. Usher with a simple ping or message. No, something of this caliber needed to be enticed, drawn in like a predator to its prey. Parvati had to make him want what she was offering. So, she manipulated the situation, weaving it to her advantage.

A gift had been sent ahead- small, but significant enough to capture Mr. Usher's interest. An abandoned ship floating in the void, its crew barely alive. Inside its systems, a wealth of high-level Alliance secrets lay dormant, nothing that would bring governments to their knees, but enough to stir curiosity. It was a gamble, but Parvati was confident in her move. She had left a trail of breadcrumbs for Mr. Usher to follow, breadcrumbs that would lead him right here. Once the creature accessed the data, it would find the coordinates, the club, and the lounge where Parvati now sat waiting.

The Sable droids stood motionless beside her, prepared for anything. Parvati's systems were already primed, every angle covered, every potential escape route mapped. If the meeting went awry, she would be ready.

Another slow drag from her cigarette. The waiting was always the hardest part, but Parvati had long learned to be patient. Her moves were never rushed.

Mr. Usher Mr. Usher

 
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Echoes in the Booth

The silence wasn’t perfect; near the booth’s edge—beneath the buzz of suppressed bass and neon-thick glass—something wrong began to pulse. Not in sync with the rhythm of the music; equally abnormal to the nightclub on Denon as it was to the galaxy beyond.

The ice in her glass shifted. Broke free from itself. Floated to the surface with a clinking sound—just enough to fracture the illusion of calm.

Then he stepped through.
The door never opened.

He was simply there—mid-booth, seated across from her. As if he’d always been.
The last tendrils of biomass crept quietly up from the ground into the pinstriped pants of the husk, betraying the method behind the moment.
Not magic. Just biology refined to an art form.
A silhouette formed from flesh and shadow: a gentleman’s husk sculpted in dark lacquered bone, as though wearing a baroque mask, adorned in a long overcoat that shimmered like molted wings in nightclub light. His gloves were too smooth, no wrinkles of use or hints of seams. A perfect recreation of an imperfect recollection of the garment.

No breath. No heartbeat.
But his voice moved.

“Exquisite packaging. Well-placed bait. I confess…”
The husk tilted its head—not like a man, but like something testing joint tension.
"your curiosity has a flavor I find worth pursuing.”

His words emerged from behind the mask, some unseen organ mimicking human speech without the limitations of sharing the functions of digestion and respiration.

“I have reviewed your offering. The secrets were half-rotted. The crew fermented, but the information was pristine. The ship itself barely need repair to function for my purposes.”

The husk leaned in now, arms folding with delicate creaks. One gloved hand rested atop the table, idly tapping. Almost an anxious tic, likely picked up from the aforementioned crew. They—No, simply just 'he' now—had not been in good condition. The process of incorporating the memories occasionally came with such psychic indigestion. He remembered perspectives from both predator and prey – and the weeks of slow agony beforehand. Both, now indestiguishable from the other, mourned the crew lost before the Greater Ego's intervention, the decay of gray matter rendering their memories and personalities unrecoverable. The Greater Ego had pleasant memories from a million lifetimes to reassure itself.

Such rumination was expensive when one had a thousand places to be simultaneously.

The tapping halted. The husk on Denon resumed its focus, same as the mimic predators on New Cov, sewer dwellers on Coruscant, and the custodians of the Vault.

“So. Would you prefer exchanging pleasantries before unveiling your motive, or are you in a rush?”

No overt threat.
Not intentionally.

Location: Denon Nightclub, VIP Room
Objective: Parley with the Inquisitive woman
Tags: Parvati Parvati
 
Devil In A Tight Dress


Parvati's gaze didn't falter as the creature slid into place across from her- an impossibility made flesh. The air between them hummed with a peculiar energy, the odd pulse of something wrong just beneath the surface. The faintest flicker of discomfort brushed the edges of her composure, but only for a moment, she'd learned long ago how to hold herself steady when the world around her threatened to unsettle her. Even the unsettling presence of Mr. Usher, with his shifting flesh and cold, dispassionate voice, could not break her focus.

She didn't flinch. Instead, she gave him the slightest tilt of a smile. "Your… presence is certainly unique," she said, her voice smooth, a perfect blend of calculated poise and a subtle undercurrent of amusement. "But then again, I suppose I shouldn't expect anything less from a creature who thrives on the finer intricacies of life- and death."

Her eyes briefly narrowed, a soft acknowledgment of the creature's disturbing aura, but there was something about the way it moved, something eerily familiar. She let her thoughts slip away from the moment, her mind sharpening to the task at hand.

"The packaging is, as you said, exquisite. But then, the presentation is half the game, isn't it?" she added, leaning back slightly, her gaze never wavering from his.

The Sable droids were poised, silent sentinels by her side, their presence a calm contrast to the palpable strangeness of the moment. Her hands, delicate yet steady, wrapped around her glass, fingers tracing its rim as she listened intently to Mr. Usher's words. But she was no stranger to unsettling company.

A small, almost imperceptible smirk tugged at her lips. "As for the offering…" Her voice dipped just slightly, the faintest edge of amusement threading through her tone. "The ship may have been flawed, but it did its job. I knew you would find value in the details. And as for the secrets, well, what is a game without a little rot to keep it interesting?"

Her eyes flicked to him briefly, measuring. "But I do have to say, if you'd found the ship sooner, you'd have had much better luck with the crew. They were in much better shape when they were sent out. They simply didn't fare well after... well, you know."

She couldn't help the subtle jab, the almost imperceptible challenge as she spoke. It wasn't a taunt, more her standing her ground. She knew if that if he wanted her dead, he would likely be able to do it. Some might consider it unwise to prod a beast like him, but Parvati wanted to show she wasn't one to be pushed around.

Another sip of her whiskey, the glass gliding effortlessly across the table in a movement both fluid and purposeful.

"I don't think pleasantries are necessary," she continued, her voice cool, confident. "You've come, you've seen, and now… we both know why we're here." Her tone dropped, just a fraction, drawing him in closer with that touch of smooth calculation. "So let's not waste time with games, Mr. Usher. I've always preferred to deal in facts."

Her gaze never left his as she set her glass down gently, the sound of it against the table a sharp punctuation to her words. "I want what you can give me, and I believe you'll want what I can offer. Let's see if we can make this… arrangement work."

The subtle challenge lingered in her words, an invitation wrapped in a velvet glove, one that only someone like Mr. Usher could truly understand. The tension, though present, didn't quite touch her. She had kept it together, even in the face of the unsettling nature of the creature before her. But she knew when to let that discomfort show, just enough to remind him that this was her game, her rules.

Mr. Usher Mr. Usher
 

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