Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Aftermath

[member="Malia Afredane"]

Kairon placed the back of his hand over his mouth and yawned. “Was a busy day yesterday,” he explained quietly with a gentle smile, reaching out to place his hand on the small of her back. His eyes turned to the refresher. “Missed opportunity I feel,” he added. Next time, he promised himself. He imagined what that would be like briefly. Waking up wrapped around each other, sharing the first gentle kiss of the morning before the slow build of arousal. Suddenly it home that she was going out for meetings and they would be apart again.

He let out a slow sigh, looking around the room. His waistcoat was thrown haphazardly across a chair. There was a kettle on the table. “I should probably get that cup of caff we seemed to forget last night,” he said. His eyebrows came together and his bottom lip stuck out in a playfully sad expression. “How many meetings do you have today?” he asked.
 
"Three," she sighed, following his gaze to the caf pot and chuckling to herself.

Of course, the sight of him curled in her sheets had made her desperately want to cancel her meetings and throw her pretty clothes on the floor with his, but she had dodged these meetings too long already. If she wanted the bigger ship at the auction, every credit counted.

"Two demos and a lunch meeting. The last one should be done with around dinner time though, if you wanted to see me later?" Her voice trailed off, her inflection raising at the end, both a statement and a question. She wanted to see him again, a lot more agains actually. The previous day had been a little bit of an anomaly and she could stand for it being more status quo and less random occurrence. She leaned forward and kissed him, unable to cure herself of the need to taste his lips, no matter how many times she indulged herself. She pulled away, looking in his groggy eyes.

"After today, I'm free for a few days. We could go out to the lake country. I hear it's pretty nice."

[member="Kairon Rees"]
 
[member="Malia Afredane"]

Please,” he said, almost pleadingly, before she leant in for a kiss. It physically ached as she pulled herself away from him. As she held his gaze and suggested a retreat for a few days he idly ran his hand through her brown hair, heedless of whether she had styled it for her meetings. In his head he imagined small, remote cottage, perhaps a fire. Lakes didn’t feature in his imagination. His eyes traced the outline of her figure. She looked good in the well-tailored suit that accentuated her slender waist.

He gave a shallow nod. “That sounds like a brilliant idea. I’ll book somewhere for dinner and a place to stay,” he agreed. But as she moved to stand again he pulled himself up quickly, the sheets slipping down him. His arm wrapped around her waist and pulled her back down onto the bed and across his lap. After a few passionate moments that threatened to get out of hand, they gave each other a rather sheepish look. Kairon bit his lower lip and let out a slow, stuttered sigh. There was no need for either of them to say ‘later’, they bother saw it in each other’s eyes.

“Nothing tomorrow morning though right?” he would ask.

Kairon didn’t bother to stay in the hotel room for long after she had left, forsaking a shower to simply dress in his creased up clothes. As he left a gentleman from the room next door shot him a rather sour look. Apparently soundproofing wasn’t too good here. He had the good grace to look away in an embarrassed manner.




“Ho, Kairon!” Jarrick called across the hangar. He was stood on top of one of the ship’s nacelles, with a welding tool in his hands.

“Problem?” Kairon called. They probably should have been carrying out a few more local hyperspace hops and had the Quintessence worked over by the Alliance mechanics once more. The window to catch up with Malia had been small, however, and Jarrick himself had told him to make the trip.

“Nothing much! The fourth power coupling pair registered a fault. Think this drive has a more jittery power draw than the last one, I’m putting a capacitor in to smooth it all out,” he called down. “I’ll come meet you in the mess.” The old veteran still referred to the ship’s dining table and small kitchen as the ‘mess.’




Kairon headed on up the ramp into his ship, taking the ladder up to the top floor of the forward saucer section. Asmus was still polishing off his breakfast; the boy always seemed to be eating. He shot his uncle a sidelong glance and smirked.

“You know, Jarrick said this is only the third time he’s had to take a test flight just so the captain could get his leg over!” Asmus said with clear mirth.

Kairon ignored him as he poured himself some cereal and sat down at the table. There was a curious expression on his nephew’s face. Kairon knew him well enough to know what it was. The boy was considering that his usually surly uncle had let the comment slip and pondering on how far he could push his luck.

The boy picked his comm up and placed it against his ear. “Hello? Is that the Tiness Book of Records? Yes, sorry, could I just confirm what the longest dry spell ever broken is. Oh really? Well I think I…”

“Hello, is that adoptions? Yes, well unfortunately neither his mother nor his kind Uncle who feeds him can stand the sight of his face without slapping him. No…no I don’t think he has much of a chance of finding a new home,” Kairon interrupted, mirroring the rather simplistic jest.

“That was mean,” Asmus stated flatly.

“If you’re feeling clever, you can go and help Jarrick,” Kairon retorted, but he simply wasn’t in the mood for chastising his nephew today. Even the slightest tinge of anger at the boy's jibes was extinguished in a wave of serenity. He hadn’t felt that way in a long, long time. Just a few days as he had been trying to come to terms with the experience on the Union cruiser, he would have flown into a rage at the slightest provocation.

“I have been helping him!”

Is that what you call it?” came an incredulous question from the doorway. Jarrick was still wiping some grease from his hands.

“Fine!” Asmus replied in a defeated tone. He headed down the ladder, probably to change out of his typically fancy outfit.




Jarrick grabbed a cup of caf and sat down at the table opposite Kairon. “So, I’m assuming you didn’t spend the night drunk in a ditch?”

Kairon didn’t make eye contact. “No,” he replied with a wry smile.

“Good.” Jarrick replied with a curt nod. “Thought the two of you were going to skirt around the issue forever. Been around you long enough to tell she had your interest. Think she’s a good match, for what it’s worth.”

Kairon nodded. His second was a good man really, he tried to do right be everyone around him in his own way. “Need to talk to you on that,” Kairon said.

“You’re moving out already?” Jarrick queried.

“What? No. There was something else we needed to talk about. Why would you ask that?”

“So you’re just going to fly off in your separate directions?” Jarrick countered. “I’ve not seen you happy in months. We’d taken to having a pool on when you’d next crack a smile.”

“We’ve only really spent a few hours together,” Kairon replied, but it was said half-heartedly. He hadn’t expected Jarrick to so openly start a conversation on a private matter like this, and it had completely derailed his train of thought.

“You’re not fifteen though. I’m sorry, I’m sure you’re thinking plenty. Don’t let her go though. Couldn’t stand you going back to a permanent scowl again.”

Kairon didn’t reply. He had nothing else to say. It was a problem that didn’t have a simple answer. Both he and Mal were probably at space two thirds of the time. If they relied on circumstance they would make maybe three or four meetings a year. He thought back to her pressed against him as they watched the sunset and a warm smile broke across his face. He realised that a string of occasional hook-ups wasn’t going to be enough.

“Look,” he said. “Mal was a bit shaken up by how you explained the situation to her back on that Union ship. I think it would be good if you talked to her about it at some point,” Kairon explained, taking the subject away from the situation with Mal, which he needed to work out on his own.

Jarrick looked suitably embarrassed, running a hand across his shaved head. “Yeah…yeah. I’ll talk to her about it.”

“But don’t make it seem like I told you to talk about it.”

“Right.”

“Where’s Mai?”

“The usual,” Jarrick explained. “Vanished shortly after touch down. Will miraculously appear five minutes before take-off.”

“We should try locking the doors earlier,” Kairon replied.

“If you do have a bit of time today, I could use a hand installing the capacitors. They’re heavy and Asmus’ idea of helping seems to be trying to wind me up and looking at dirty components with disdain.”

“Sure,” Kairon replied. Nothing like a bit of manual work to calm the mind and let him think through his – their – situation.

“Excellent, we’ll get on with…waitisthatabottleofWhyren’s?”

“Yes,” Kairon replied rather sheepishly.

“Good lord man. If you’d bought me bottle you could have had me any way you wanted and saved the flight!” They laughed together briefly. Kairon briefly wondered how well Mal could handle the inevitable crude humour of his crew. Given her career path, he imagined reasonably well, but he had seen first-hand the insecurities that bubbled just beneath the surface.

There was still no way he could reconcile her apprehension to admit her feelings for him, with his own sense of self-worth. She was eloquent and independent, but kind and beautiful. There was a quick hot flash of fear as he wondered if she would even see him again. Maybe she was just…Get a grip! he chastised himself. The time they had shared together had been enough to reveal just how they felt about each other. For some reason she seemed as infatuated as he did. It was just difficult to accept.

“I’m going to stay a few days,” Kairon said. “You’re alright to handle the quick runs for the Alliance?”

“Look, you’ve barely taken a day of leave since we started sailing together. I reckon you’re overdue. I’ll take good care of her,” Jarrick replied. That was that then.

“Come on then,” Kairon said, and the pair quickly tidied up the table. There hadn’t been much mirth on the ship since the run in with the Union. Things were gradually settling back down to normal for the crew now, but for Kairon events had taken quite a different tack. The absent smile barely left his face as he changed into rough clothes for working on the ship. Her scent still lingered on his clothes and skin and he felt a sudden pang of regret at being apart. Soon, he’d see her again soon.

Whilst they worked, he used a datapad to book a table at a well-rated, but mid price restaurant that evening. He found a few places they could stay in the Lake country. They could talk about it later. He sent Mal a quick message with the details, and a few images of remote places to stay in the Lake Country. Feeling slightly embarrassed he still signed off his message with “missing you already.”
 
Kairon must have been a good luck charm of some kind, as Mal sailed through her morning demo and then a lunch meeting. Not only did she sign both deals, she sold extra crates of gear and an upgrade packet to boot.The only obstacle left was the persnickety merc company from Hutta who generally took quite a few knocks dealing with Hutt cartels. The demo was fine, although the company commander was a little wary of her until he asked her how she got the scar. Before long, they were trading stories of outwitting idiots in bar fights and gigs gone bad. Fast friends. Bought new gear and the upgrades. It was a good day.

Not as good as the previous one, but still good. The merc commander invited her to dinner, but she politely declined, citing that she had a meeting with the captain of a smuggling crew across town. The commander flashed her a knowing smile and she wondered for half a second how obvious it was that she was infatuated with Kairon.

She managed to sneak a look at the restaurant he picked out for dinner. Nice place, not too nice where she would feel weird about it, but nice enough. She couldn’t wait to shed the suit, didn’t want to wear her normal getup but there was something she had her eye on that would be perfect. She had just enough time to get to the store, get back to the hotel and change before she met him for dinner.

She felt a little odd in a dress, but she had been eyeing it for ages, and resigned that she would never have a place to wear it. Rusty sure as hell wasn’t taking her to someplace she would need to look nice. This was perfect. It wasn’t fancy, no seq uins, no lace. Just a flowing sheer sundress in muted ivy green that floated around her as she walked. It was off the shoulders, and brought out the green in her hazel eyes. She didn’t have any jewelry to pair with it, something the women who worked at the store tried to remedy, but she just wanted the dress.

Apparently she arrived first, so she took a seat at the bar and ordered a glass of white wine, something local feeling as though wearing a dress like this necessitated it rather than drinking whiskey. Ladies didn’t drink whiskey, her mother told her once. She retorted with something about ladies not owning bars either but that went over as well as she’d expected.

She casually wondered if he would be weirded out with her in a dress. If he’d recognize her in it. Now that she was sitting there, looking at other women enjoying dinner and drinks, she pondered if she should have bought a necklace or earrings.


[member="Kairon Rees"]
 
"I'm so sorry," Kairon apologised profusely as he stepped back from the waiter. The man in the casual blade shirt smiled falsely and told Kairon it was no bother at all and returned to the kitchen to fetch another wine. At least none has spilled over Kairon. Having been delighted to spot Mal across the room he had been torn between rushing over to her, and strolling casually. Instead he'd nearly tripped over his own feet and into the waiter carrying two glasses of red.

Oh hell, she'd have spotted him by now an way. Once again he wore a waistcoat over a long sleeved shirt, but this time the shirt was double cuffed and wore a tie. A slightly more elaborate chain fob adorned the more formal grey waistcoat. For the merchant classes of Eriadu, waistcoats had been in fashion for a very long time.

"Wow," he said as he approached the table, with a stupid smile plastered across his face. Why did the dress have to be off the shoulder? Was it odd how much a bare shoulder affected him? She'd barely been from his thoughts all day, but again he found himself almost speechless in the first few moments of seeing her again.

He leant over to offer a quick kiss on the cheek, unable to resist placing his hand on the back of her shoulder, before taking his seat. "You haven't been here long?" There was something he wanted to say, to try and explain to her. Having thought on it all day, for the moment he just wanted to revel in her company for a while.
 
"No," she shook her head.

He looked good and she idly entertained the thought of skipping dinner for more salacious pursuits until her stomach lightly growled and reminded her that lunch had been many hours prior.

The waiter approached to offer Kairon a drink, but Mal got his attention first, ordering a very nice bottle of century old Bordeaux that was a couple hundred credits a bottle. She knew Kairon was going to give her a look, but she raised her hand as the waiter left, shaking her head for silence.

"You were a good luck charm. I closed all three deals. So this bottle is on me."

She had researched the vintage while she had been waiting but when it was brought to the table and opened, she had Kairon give it a taste for approval. Whiskey was her thing, wine was a little lost on her. She looked at him expectantly as the cork and small taste where presented to him.

[member="Kairon Rees"]
 
Kairon gave her a little lopsided smile as he checked the cork. Mal knew her own mind and there was no use arguing, but he gave a perfunctory: "you shouldn't have." He briefly recalled her poking out her tongue when paying for lunch the previous day and smiled.
Back on Eriadu the noble system had a history anchored in the pre-hyperspace era. Back then it was expected that the head of a family tasted drink that he wished to share at a gather, to show to his guests that it had not been poisoned. Apparently the methods of getting around this step to poison a rival family had been many and varied. But a two hundred credit bottle? Yeah you checked that before you took it. It was a good choice, though he knew you could pick up the vintage for less around the inner rim. His knowledge of wine straddled both his professional and personal life. Trade restrictions on alcohol were stringent, and knowing where to ship his - frequently stolen - cargo was vital.

"You are going to decant that?" Kairon asked in a friendly tone. The very young waiter pulled a face that suggested he hadn't expected to. However, one of his more senior colleagues had already picked up some glassware and deposited a decanter on the table. Whilst he made no attempt to chastise the waiter or draw attention to this, Kairon shot Mal a quick look, now deeply concerned she was thinking he was a pretentious arse. A drink would probably be good to settle the nerve actually. After the week they'd had and the sudden release of passion last night, it was inevitable he felt a little tentative now.

The deep claret was given a quick swirl, sniff and taste. No point standing on ceremony unnecessarily when they could both be drinking the exceptional wine in short order, in his opinion. The orange tinged colour suggested it had been aged. The wine had a complex body, but surprisingly fruity notes. However it was exceptionally well balanced. A quick nod and Mal was poured a full glass.

"So it all went well today then?" he asked as he glanced across the menu. He tutted as he noticed a small stain on the back of his thumb and surreptitiously wipes it with his napkin. "Took nearly an hour scrubbing all the grease off already," he quietly apologised.
 
She chuckled and smiled, her eyes looking more green as she laughed.

"Don't apologize. We fly antique freighters that should be in museums, not still bouncing around the galaxy."

The wine was divine and at his suggestion, she ordered a very nice cut of a red meat, slow roasted with a caf and chocolate crust on it. The bitter sweetness of the food paired perfectly with the wine and dinner ended with a equally decadent dessert and a strongly brewed cup of caf.

Mal listened to him speak about his crew, his ship, his nephew; pride in all of it showing through she watched him. What the devil was he doing sitting here with her?

Can it, Afredane.

The check came and they squabbled over the bill, which he eventually won but she still had his routing codes from doing that job with him so she wired her half into his ship account. He could chastise her for it later.

As they were leisurely walking down the darkened street to her hotel, the conversation changed to the getaway.

"I didn't get a chance to look over what you sent me. What'd you find?"

His eyes were mesmerizing, care worn and troubled, sure. But also intensely deep and still edged with a longing for something she couldn't quite name. She looked up at him, holding hands and wrapped around one of his arms, waiting on his rumbling explanation. She swore he looked 10 years younger when he smiled and she aimed to make him do it as often as possible.
 
Looking over his shoulder, he found her watching him intently again. Kairon's heart fluttered and he squeezed her hands with his own. She was looking at him as if he was worth watching and it made his spirit soar.

He gave a half hearted shrug. "A few places," he said. "Nice and isolated. One had a log fire, another had a jacuzzi," he said, his smile broadening as a few scenarios played out in his mind. He leant over and gently kissed her exposed shoulder, his teeth gently brushing against her skin. Calm down, you wanted to say something, he told himself. Off the shoulder dresses hey?

"Look I just wanted to say... I know we have jobs lined up after this, but I don't want it to be too long before we see each other again," he said quietly. Perhaps he should have told her that he couldn't stand the thought of being apart for even a day, let alone a week, but too often he was plain with his words.



Far away in the Maramere system, the fifth Union fleet was assembling. No matter what Mal said, no matter what else happened in the Galaxy as they made love and fell asleep content in each other's arms again, the final preparations were being made.

In thirty six hours Lucrehulks would hang in the skies of Naboo once more.
 
The comlink buzzed on the night table jarring Mal awake. She glared at the clock, bleary eyed and disappointed that she was not able to sleep in. It was early. Way early. The streets outside the window of her room lay in quiet shadow with just the whistles of waking birds. She fumbled for the small device, trying to figure out who in the karking hells would call her right now. It was Rusty. Secure line. Sliding it up to her ear so she wouldn't wake Kairon, although she doubted he was still asleep with the racket the thing was making, she whispered as quietly as she could.

"It's 5 am."

She listened a moment then sat bolt upright in bed.

"What? I'm gonna karking kill him."

Fear was etched across her face.

"I'll be there in 20."

Her heart was pounding in her throat and she sat still, eyes open wide for a moment before she threw the covers back and started grabbing her things and throwing them into her duffle retreived from the closet floor. She looked at Kairon, a mix of terror and determination in her eyes as she dressed quickly in her usual brown pants, button down and duster, her blaster belt fastened on her hips.

"I have to go. This can't wait." She dumped all her toiletries into her duffle, checked the closets and under the bed while she grabbed her boots.

She sat down next to him on the bed, pulling them on one at a time, quickly as she could. She didn't even put a brush through her hair. She slowed up for a moment to turn to him and lay a hand on his cheek. He looked bewildered and afraid but she leaned in and kissed him deeply and slowly. She stroked his cheek with her thumb as she pulled back, looking him in the eyes.

"There's no time to explain right now. It's my mom, and I gotta go. I'll tell you everything when it's over. Just...just know that these last two days have been the best I've had in years and it's all because of you. As soon as this is over, I'll find you."
 
Kairon sat perches on the end of the bed. Several rays of dawn light cut through the gaps in the curtains, casting bright stripes across his body. The room was evidently empty, more so because it looked lived it yet bereft of any belongings. His clothes were spread across the floor still, but hers were gone. The room looked empty, it felt empty.

Perhaps he should have said more than: “Call me if I can help.” Seeing that expression had taken him straight back to that Techno Union cell block. Those emotions were still too raw and he’d spent the last hour simply wrangling with his own thoughts on his own.

After telling himself to get a grip several times he slid down off the bed and padded across the floor to the shower. Standing under the hot water he started to focus on the last two days, and by the time it was over he had a stupid grin plastered across his face again. The uncertainty of what came next was real however, rather than a result of the emotional trauma wrought upon them by the Union. A shame they wouldn’t get those two days in an isolated cabin. Entertaining thoughts of what that time would have been like, he drifted off on the bed for a short snooze. It still held her scent, which he found comforting.



The following day, those darkest memories managed to drown all feelings once again. Kairon stood at Theed’s spaceport, fists clenched at his sides. He looked up to the skies and watched the iconic torus-shaped vessels descend into the upper atmosphere.

“They’re telling all civilian ships to stay grounded,” Jarrick said over his shoulder.

“Get her up and running now.”

“She’s good to go, haven’t fired the new weapons in anger but…”

“We’re leaving,” Kairon insisted through clenched teeth. Feth, where are you Mal? he thought. He hoped she wasn’t on world still.

Four droid fighters and a gunship were destroyed for minimal return in their escape. The new engines and weapons played their part. It would have been sensible to stay on the ground, keep their heads down until the siege was lifted, or the Union took full control. Rees wasn’t rolling over for the Union again.
 

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