Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Public Asphalt and Ablutions



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DARKNESS REIGNS ON THE JEWEL
LEVEL 1142


Coruscant.

It was now a world dominated by Star Destroyers, banners, marching armies, and the ever-gnawing presence of Big Brother. The center of the galaxy- literally and figuratively, was a decisive, disastrous blow to the Alliance. It was a failure on every level of Alliance leadership, military, government- every bit was their fault. He was not there to defend it a second time. Perhaps, with Revenant Squadron and the Starfighter Corps under his leadership he could have prevented some of the losses, or even helped defend the Alliance's jewel in the Core.

But, such thoughts were pointless and fruitless now.

Wedge Draav was not among friends anymore. In fact, he was alone. They did not know he was here. Nobody did. He had pulled many strings, lied, and coerced his way to get to Coruscant. Despite all the machinations of the Empire, it was entirely not impossible to get on the planet without being noticed. Billions upon billions of ships, crafts, and trillions of people moved around, in, away, and coming into Coruscant. The Empire controlled much, and it was vast, but the system to control the entire planet was not yet there. Not yet, at least. Wedge had no idea what a surveillance state in the Empire looked like.

And he didn't want to find out.

He was on Coruscant for one simple reason.

Find Reima Vitalis Reima Vitalis . Find anything.

To that end, he had contacted people from all over- and was heading to one of the many lower levels of Coruscant that was sparsely under Imperial control to find some forged documents and hopefully, intelligence to lead him to her. Whether the Empire cared to even bother with the lower levels of Coruscant was another question entirely. Perhaps it was better to simply not waste the resources and let the rot consume itself. But he found himself here.

His contact was roughly five hundred meters away, and through hundreds of denizens on this level alone. He wondered if it would go smoothly- or a bullet, knife, or blaster was waiting for him at the end of this.


 
Hubert stands outside of some dive cantina on the lower levels, a deathstick hanging from his lips as he broods over his escape plan. There were a lot of parts to his plan, but ending up in Coruscant wasn't one of them in the slightest. He detests the Empire... The blind eye they turn- or rather, the eye they use to watch the credits stack in front of them, selling slave after slave. Unfortunately, he was one of them, and that old wound leaves a sour taste in his mouth any time the Empire is mentioned. So needless to say, being surrounded by them makes his face want to pucker in anger.

He was to meet a contact at one of the spaceports between here and Tatooine, but there were... Complications...

Upon arrival at said station, the Empire was already swarming the platforms. He had heard one of them shouting at an elderly Rodian. something about looking for someone. Hubert hadn't paid it much mind as he tried to find the nearest exit. That exit just so happened to be a public transport to Coruscant, that of which was already boarded and searched by the Imperial party.

Ducking the view of any Imperials, be it by grace or luck, Hubert snuck his way onto the transport, and hunkered down until it reached its destination. Now it seems the Galaxy is against him. Stranded on an Imperial planet, wanted for murder, smuggling, and a few other things, no allies to speak of, and no exit strategy, he feels an impending sense of doom, and it shows on his face as he contemplates his strategy.

His best idea so far is to try and sneak his way back onto a transport, but there is a very high risk there will be a group of Imps waiting on the other side to rip any and all passengers out of their seats and take their identification. A long exhale blows through his nostrils, and he looks to the Coruscant sky, watching the speeders whiz by overhead...

...And a smile appears on his face, along with an idea in his head...

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Had it been two days since the crash, or three?

The bruises from where the crash webbing had arrested her body hadn't yet turned green, so -- two, Reima guessed. She stood in front of a chrome elevator door, examining herself in its almost-mirror finish, blouse unbuttoned to examine her injuries. Thankfully, the bruising seemed to be the worst of it. She had experience -- from the last invasion of Coruscant, in fact -- what a broken rib felt like, what a punctured rib felt like, and what a dislocated shoulder felt like. That had come in slightly handy when she'd had to reset Noema Kintar Noema Kintar 's dislocated shoulder. Reima couldn't do much for what she was pretty sure was a fractured wrist except a makeshift splint, but that was better than nothing.

Reima was debating tearing open one of the two remaining hygeine wipes -- showers in a disposable cloth, they were advertised as -- but decided she should give it another day or so. She felt a bit worn out, a bit grimy, but a discreet sniff confirmed that she didn't offend, but that would probably change if she went another day without a shower.

Not for the first time, she reflected on how dismal her timing was. If she had been but an hour earlier, she would still have been Revenant Twelve, would have been the property of Revenant Squadron. She would still have her GADF-issued communicator, which would mean she could be found. Even if that meant being found by the Alliance, that was preferable to dying in the warren of tunnels and corridors and maintenance shafts that Reima and Noema and the nearly 180 civilians who had survived the ship crash (and the subway derailment it had caused by plunging through the surface and into the tunnel) were using.

They didn't yet know where they were going -- other than away from the Federal District -- but they would have to figure it out sooner or later. Reima heard footsteps from behind her and tugged her torn blouse back into place for modesty, doing up the buttons as Noema rounded the corner. "The scheduled blind spot is coming in five. We need to get into position," the woman said.

"Coming," Reima said. She sipped a half mouthful of water from her travel water bottle, then held it out to Noema.

"Thank you, but no, I'm fine. I just had a drink when I took my pills." She fell into ginger step beside Reima as the women emerged from the disused turbolift lobby, left unpowered by years of neglect. "Lucky you had those in your purse."

"Lucky," Reima agreed with a mirthless smile. "Show me again where this tunnel will take us? You said it was the Corellian District?"

"The Corellian District," Noema agreed. "Five clicks from the equitorial line, which will be our fastest way out of the area. In theory we should be able to get some news there, too."

"Get a view of how things are elsewhere, so we can plan where to go."

"And how to get there," Noema concurred.

"Not concerned that we look like refugees?"

Noema smiled a smile that didn't reach her voice. "From what I saw and heard during the initial invasion, there will be plenty of people in the same condition or worse. If we stand out, there's no reason for people to think we're cause for concern."

"That's what I like to hear," said Reima grimly. "How's your arm?"

Noema smirked. This time the humor touched her voice. "Just ducky, as long as I don't move or walk or breathe."

"All set, then," Reima said.

 










Objective: Get off-world



Tags: Reima Vitalis Reima Vitalis Wedge Draav Wedge Draav

Gear: Tool Kit



-----------



The idea storms through Huberts' mind like a typhoon. It's crazy, but it may just be crazy enough to work. Take a speeder, race to the shipyard, hotwire the fastest, closest ship, and bolt out. Of course, it was missing a few... Key elements... But his luck has held out for him through more dangerous, and much less fulfilling endeavors.

Now all he has to do, is try and blend into the crowd, and make his way up to skylane level without getting spotted by authorities. (Those key elements come into play at this point in the plan, naturally.) Another sigh departs from his nostrils, and he slips his deathstick back into his coat pocket, a cigarette between his fingers as his hand retracts from his chest. With the placement of the cigarette between his lips, and another reach into his pocket for his lighter, he begins to scan the streets, leaning against his place along the wall as the faces pass by with the seconds.

Maybe if he is patient enough, he can find himself a cozy little spot greasing the cogs and tightening the screws for some smuggler crew headed off-world. A sense of anxiety begins to creep through him slowly, as if he were being watched. But given the sorrowful, and tiresome expressions on the faces before him, this feeling is quickly pushed to the back of his mind. Yet the anxiety stays with him, right in his gut.

Now is only a matter of keeping his eyes and ears open, listening for any opportunity to get himself off-world. And if this doesn't work, it's back to plan A...



















 
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He sat across from a particularly slimy man, and his cronies. Three of them, two on the left, and one on the right, plus the man in the middle. He rolled his hands on the desk, sliding across his payment. A lot of credits, and then UCs as well. He leaned forward in his seat, watching his contact-

His name was Styl.

Styl was a callous man, but not unfair, not unintelligent. And definitely a man of his word. In criminality, it was a more common occurrence than most let on. He took a deep breath, tapping his chin as he watched Wedge from across his desk.

"I tell you what I know- and you go down there. Find ya lady, do the thing. But even I am having problems getting off the planet." He said, turning his head to the compatriots in the room. He leaned forward, and his voice turned low. Genuine concern. "She must be some kinda woman, if you're risking all this, Wedge."

Wedge leaned back, the tone telling him Styl wasn't going to cause him any problems. But there was genuine concern from the man's voice. Perhaps he was a citizen of the Alliance and loyal in a way, or just concerned with sending a man to the depths of Coruscant. Wedge looked at the floor, gathering his thoughts, before raising his eyes to meet Styl's.

"She's the only one, Styl."

He couldn't articulate what Reima did for him, not fully. It would be impossible to quantify, to articulate that woman. She was more than his wife-to-be. She was more than a regent, a royal, a pilot, a soldier, a student, a scholar. She was all those things, but more importantly than all of those to Wedge, more important than air that he breathed-

She was his galaxy.

His galaxy was not stars, planets, lines on a map of hyperspace lines. It was the brown of her eyes. The silkiness of her hair. Her soft skin glowing in an afternoon light. The way she spoke- eloquent, articulate, beautiful. Styl looked satisfied with the answer, nodding his head. He slid over a dataset, a map, and nudged his head to one of his men. "I have some equipment for you to take. Couple of guns, communicators, and-" He stopped, reaching under his desk. He seemed touched, moved, almost. He thumbed something- and then produced a slugthrower. Integrally suppressed, magazine fed. A killer's weapon. A holographic optic on the top of the weapon, ensuring pinpoint shots. A weapon for an assassin. Or maybe, a man on the move. "Take one of those Pathfinder uniforms in there too. Alliance left lotsa gear around after the withdrawal." Wedge winced. The Pathfinder gear was helpful, surely. The uniform was sturdy and the gear on it was more than helpful to sneak around. That, and throwing a coat over it- which was helpful with the colder breeze coming in, and nobody would know.

Wedge stood, shaking Styl's hand. He was, despite his status, a good man. Wedge heard he had been helping people duck around the Empire. He was a good man doing something illegal before- but now, the galaxy could use rebels.

He changed into the uniform, ditching the helmet. Instead- he couldn't help himself. He donned his sunglasses, sleak, professional, dark, but unmistakably a pilot's choice. He crouched near the container, checking over the unfamiliar gear. He looked at the sleeve of the uniform- a hole right under the arm. He traced his eyes back under the arm. Another hole.

The uniform didn't come from a warehouse. He grimaced, but pushed thoughts of cleanliness aside. He had a woman to get to, sixteen levels below him. A speeder was taking him to the gathering, also arranged by Styl. He wasn't going to be able to intercept Reima's supposed movements- instead having to meet her nearest to the Corellian district.

A tunnel, a crashed pilot, her lover coming to rescue her, escapees, a tyrannical government over them all. Escape, subterfuge, criminals. It would make for a great novel premise, he mused as he set off for the speeder.

He had a woman to get to.





 
Reima was bone tired. She had aced the survival training school, never had a single problem with the rigorous PT requirements that defined Alliance military life -- unless one counted boredom, but somehow no one ever did -- and had long kept up an active lifestyle, from racing and riding to hunting and dancing. But she was tired now. Days on the move without sleep, without more than a few minutes' rest at a time meant that her muscles cried out for relief that never came. Civilians had to be supported and aided, in some cases carried. Everyone helped each other, each providing the support they could while relying on the support they needed.

Reima held an unfamiliar child -- a Duros -- against her hip. His mother was slung over the back of a Wookiee, having collapsed an hour ago. The child was heavy, but would not be put down. Reima shifted him, gathering him up, and tried not to stumble over the wreckage in the tunnel. The Duros kept his eyes back, on the Wookiee carrying his mother. Noema Kintar walked at Reima's other side, studying an old paper map intermittently whenever the emergency lighting allowed.

"I have an idea," said Noema abruptly. She thrust the map at Reima with one hand, gesturing with all her fingers with the other hand. "At the Corellian Distrct if we take this interchange, we will eventually come to the recycling center."

"What does that do for us?" Reima asked, her eyes lingering on the spot Noema had indicated.

"The total tonnage of garbage Coruscant produces is too much to be handled here, on the world," Noema explained. "It's sorted, here, at recycling centers like this. Anything that can be salvaged for something useful is sorted out from the trash. Anything that can be used for compost -- same deal. And then general refuse is, uh, compacted for transport."

"Wouldn't it all be, uh, smashed up, more or less?" Reima asked.

"It's not really treated with any delicacy," Noema replied, "but it's not compacted the same way as the rest of the trash."

Reima raised an eyebrow. "What's your confidence level in that?"

"About... ninety."

A nod there. "I'll take those odds. So you're proposing that we -- what -- hijack a trash trawler and just... sail away with the rest of the garbage?"

"Something like that," said Noema. "Now, the security picture? That's Unclear. It wasn't really my area of expertise. But I don't remember there being a lot of chat about the recycling centers. People were more concerned about things getting in, not things getting out."

"The Imperials are likely different. But maybe it's soon enough that they wouldn't have changed gears yet."

 





The speeder ride was quiet. By Coruscanti standards, at least. The ride was short, and uneventful but rather cerebral. The driver didn't say a word. Probably under strict orders not to. Or, maybe he didn't want to ask what Wedge was getting into. Imperial patrols loomed in the sky, TIE fighters on regular intercept routes for off-world incomers. Anyone not having clearance was probably greeting nicely by Stormtroopers, or maybe not even making it into atmosphere, if he knew the Empire. His eyes went upwards, grimacing at the thought of the Emprie dominating the skies that once belonged to him.

He remembered the Crimson Liners, how valiantly they fought across the skies of Coruscant. He wondered if he'd have another enemy like that. Worthy. His eyes were cast into shadow as they pulled downwards and descended, leaving thoughts such as the sky and the stars above behind, and the reality of the gritty underbelly of Coruscant into view.

The driver stopped on a landing platform. Abandoned taxi stand, probably once authorized. He guessed it was a way to cheat the Imperial eyes on the planet now. Routes being monitored, the like. He climbed out of the speeder, grabbing the wrap-covered rifle as he darted out of the speeder wordlessly, without so much as a "thank you" or look back to the driver.

The sentiment was shared when the driver took off.

Wedge crouched in one of the many shadows that the skyline produced, watching, turning his head. He pulled the cloak over him. The incoming rain was a good reason to wear the cloak, and wouldn't attract too much attention. He checked his datapad. Though not a live update, the digital map was useful. He studied the route he needed to go on. With no location and tracking on, he'd have to be keenly aware of where he was in relation to the map.

The goal was a recycling center- whether that was the rendezvous or their way off planet, Wedge had no idea. The trek was quick and quiet, most turning inside due to the fear of the incoming rain. His footsteps were quickly, passing patrols, people, shops, buildings, neon swathes of light, hookers, alien hookers, the homeless and the downtrodden.

He marched quickly, fervently. He had to get to Reima. Had to.



The recycling center- which was a fancy way of saying "ships load up with bullshit then dump the bullshit into the nearest star", came into view. He had been running damn near for two hours straight. And he hadn't even stopped but once to steal water from a bodega. He left credits on the counter, but quickly ran out and smashed the camera on his way out.

He observed the center for a while- spotting an Imperial patrol. Four troopers. They stopped. They were looking. Something caught their attention. They cocked their heads. Underground. Something was there. Wedge's eyes widened. He was roughly a hundred meters away. He moved quickly, moving with a group of dock workers, union members who didn't take kindly to Wedge walking with them. His eyes turned away to avoid being spotted, he pulled out the pistol and stuck it in the union worker's chin. The Zabrak shut the fuck up after that, and let him walk beside him. Wedge dropped a hundred-credit chit in his hand and gave him a nod.

No harm, no foul, right?

He approached the Stormtroopers who were assessing one of the many maintenance accesses of what the noise potentially was. It almost sounded like a crying child. The Stormtrooper popped open the hatch as Wedge walked forward, and the one closest to him noticed him. He pulled the pistol up, readying it. The locomotion drill meant Wedge went 45 degrees to where he was originally, and put two rounds into the first Stormtrooper, then the second, then the third. The last one quickly dropped the hatch, but the round came through his helmet, sending him tumbling aside. The brief light that was exposed in the tunnel was gone, and only the faint snap of the suppressed pistol was any evidence as to what happened to him quickly. Wedge ditched the cloak, and any onlookers recognized the Alliance uniform.

And then, in true Coruscant fashion, they simply kept walking. The business of the Imperials and potential Alliance rebels was none of their business. He stood over the dead troopers, ensuring they were dead by either kicking them or putting another bullet in their heads.

He breathed deeply, not having been that close to someone he killed in a long time. He looked around, trying to evaluate where to hide their bodies or how to escape quickly. He hoped he hadn't compromised-

He stopped.

He heard her voice.

He looked down at the hatch-



 
Reima was unaware that her voice carried through the ventilation system, though she would be pleased to learn later that she left breadcrumbs for Wedge to follow and find her. They would need all the help they could get in this deathtrap of the former Alliance capital. The last words echoing up through the grate as they progressed, barely audible but to Wedge who would be listening intently, were: "It's settled. We head for the Corellian District recycling center."

Almost an hour later, Noema had led the group to a safe spot, and she and Reima found themselves in a massive industrial duct, overlooking the recycling center. Every three minutes, the fan would start up, sucking up the sweet stench of decaying garbage, ostensibly to prevent dangerous gas buildup in the area. It wasn't dangerous in small quantities, just absolutely disgusting, but at this point Reima was just enjoying the breeze. The fan clunked to a halt and their view of the center was restored.

"Trawlers come every half hour," Noema said. "Do you think you can fly one?"

Reima didn't think, but her answer was more world-weary than bravado by now: "I can fly anything."

"I was hoping you'd say that," Noema answered. "I can probably hack the recycling center. The place is probably minimally staffed, mostly with processing droids. But we should be prepared for some armed resistance."

"You can fight, right?"

Noema hesitated. "I -- I wasn't in the field, but I do have some combat training."

"Good. It'll probably be just me and you. Maybe the Wookiee."

"I like those odds."

Reima reached over and squeezed Noema's hand lightly. "Whatever happens, it's been good to know you. We wouldn't have made it this far without you and your expertise." The women traded weary smiles. "We'll make it, I think. Hang in there."

 










Objective: Find a Way Off-World



Tags: Reima Vitalis Reima Vitalis Wedge Draav Wedge Draav

Gear: Tool-Kit, Custom Blaster Pistol



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It couldn't have even been a few minutes that Hubert was scanning the crowd, opening his ears fully to pick up on any opportunity that may arise, in hopes of finding a better plan before doing anything drastic. No longer than a slaves' meal break on Tatooine before blaster shots echo from down the street. A scowl sours his face as his chances of slipping off-world unnoticed have disappeared. With the active shooting, any and all checkpoints in a 6-district radius were likely to be pulling each and every citizen aside to check their identification, whether they're leaving or coming in.

He takes a drag from his cigarette, leaving it hanging from his mouth as he begins to walk towards his new hope. Maybe whoever was shooting needed help? And maybe, they can be convinced in a sort of... one-time alliance. It is no secret to be kept that Hubert is desperate, and that desperation will carry him to do what needs done.

He walks into the crowd, shoving past and shoulder-checking those whom paid no mind to the fact they were practically running him over. Like a fish swimming upstream, he pushes against the current of panic that only seems to grow more anxious.

Eventually he sees the culprit, a man in some uniform that seemed to dislike the Empire even more than Hubert himself, given the scene at his feet. A handful of dead troopers lie dead. For a moment, as the crowd keeps pushing past them, Hubert simply stands a yard or two away. His eyes linger over the scene of death, then carry themselves upward to meet the strangers' eyes. A piercing color, softer yet eerily menacing.

It takes him a few seconds to speak up.

"Want an extra gun? I can also fix any machine which needs it."


He figures there's no sense in wasting time with pleasantries or explanations of his skill. The man looks desperate for something, and in Huberts' own desperation, he is willing to help. Anyone who is a fiend to the Empire is a friend to Hubert. That is, as long as they share the same sentiment of friendship.

"I won't lie, it ain't purely altruistic. I need a ride, you give me that, I help you or die tryin'."


His words carry with a drawl known commonly from farmers on back-water planets, twangy and hoarse. He takes another puff from his cigarette, removing it with his off hand from his mouth, pointing at the man with the two fingers that pinch it in his grasp.

"After, if you never wanna' see me again, no hard feelin's."


A charming grin stretches across his face, revealing a set of slightly yellow teeth due to years of smoking- which, compared to the layer of black engine grease that clings to his skin, they almost seem pearl white. He knows the chances of him getting what he wants are slim, but Hubert won't die wishing he tried harder...














 



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He had no time to discern if the voice he heard nearby was really her, or just a figment of his imagination or an echo.

In the distance, Wedge heard the calls and thumping of feet. Quick-marching Stormtroopers. He knew that sound anywhere. The distinct sound of that cruel white armor making contact with concrete, steel, and in a quick, rapid fashion. They were probably coming to respond to the troopers. He cursed himself, but found himself standing face-to-face with a new problem among the litany of people who didn't give a shit about what was going on:

Wedge had no reason to trust him, but the Empire was not keen on sending people like this into the fray. They simply had no more need for spies like that- the core of the galaxy was now under the cruel eye of the Empire, spies and lying were no longer needed. Wedge lowered his weapon when the man approached, but kept it in a low-ready position. Ever distrustful on an Imperial world. He listened to him speak, callously cautious eyes flicking up and down, scanning. Maybe not an Imperial, sure.

But a criminal, a liar, a traitor. Bounty Hunter. The Empire was less enthused with Wedge and had plenty of reasons to personally dislike him- spitting directly in the Emperor's face when they tried to recruit you would do that. The man himself, however, that Wedge was looking at was not an Imperial. Simply put, of all the things Imperials were, they were clean and meticulous about their appearance. Shined shoes, clean-shaven faces, and.... brushed teeth.

And certainly not one to smoke cigarettes. He knew that much about them. The Imperials prided themselves on posture and health, appearance and circumstance. And smoking, while one of the things that Reima snuck now and again, was not something Imperials would touch. Plus, that accent- Reminded him, of him. Wedge had a slow, low way of speaking. His voice was deep and quiet at times, the few words he often said to others marked by an observation about his accent. Anaxes. Wherever he was from- the man was more alike than dislike Wedge.

"I'm getting my wife off-world. You help me, you get off too."

He turned and pointed towards the sweltering, disgusting recycling center.

"That's our ticket."

He tucked away his pistol, walking towards it. The facility was massive- and like most blue-collar sanitation places, there was not particularly a large armed presence guarding it. It was a garbage center, and the uncleanliness kept away Imperials and security guards. Wedge only had to move past a checkpoint where a weary security guard was lazily checking badges. It was a simple fix to that-

He pulled his new friend close, and swiped one from a worker leaving the facility at the same checkpoint. He kept him close, said something about "the new guy" to the guard, who stifled a laugh and continued watching whatever sports game happened to be on a small, mobile screen. He swiped the card, the light above the gate turned green and the pair was inside. Overhead, passing barges and ships ferried garbage in, garbage out, and off-world for the rarer things. Scrap metal and valuables were at least searched for by droids and human workers, passing by on floating platforms. The hovering droids scanned each barge briefly before clambering off to fulfill other duties. Wedge identified a few problems there- if the intel given to him by that crook was right, Reima was going to have a healthy amount of people with her.

That of course meant, figuring out how not to sneak just three people off the planet, but a lot more than that. And if Reima was truly leading people off Coruscant who wanted to leave, there wasn't a thing or person in the galaxy that could stop her short of killing her. And certainly not Wedge. Not that he'd argue with her. Or would want to. She was doing the right thing more than he was- his reasons for coming back to Coruscant were selfish and personal, hers were altruistic and righteous. He wasn't even upset she came without so much speaking to him. He'd done the same thing to her, only in a cockpit instead of on the ground.

And, also, perhaps, some small part of Wedge was jealous in a way. Reima was more the hero at the moment than he was. He pushed himself close to the facility wall, his new friend in tow.

"They're either here, or coming here. But we have to figure out a way to get one of the off-world barges past the droid scans and the Imperial scans. Think you can manage to fool the sensors and trackers?"

He said quietly to the new man, scouring along the wall. He looked around the facility, noticing just how many were here alone. The center must've processed the "recycling" for at least a few million people at a time. Barges flowed in and out continuously, with little interruption to their rhythm. If they were to make it out of here with a stolen barge, it was going to require a great deal of timing, daring, and expert piloting.

The last of which, Wedge remarked to himself, he was in no short supply of....



 










Objective: Figure Out How To Fool The Scanners



Tags: Reima Vitalis Reima Vitalis Wedge Draav Wedge Draav

Gear: Custom Blaster Pistol, Tool Kit



-----------



Fool the scanners? Huberts skill lies in engines mainly. He tinkers with droids but passing their scanners on the fly? A seed of doubt becomes planted in his mind about whether or not he could do it. Or rather, if he can do it unnoticed. His eyes shift around the facility. Face after face pass by, not paying the pair any mind, unknowing to the fact they are passing two fugitives in the act of their crime spree. The workers all, share a similar face to Huberts'. Sunken, tired, depressed...

Alone...

Finally, after a few short seconds of reminiscing about childhood, and the pain it had to offer, a memory flashes into his brain, shoving any and everything out and replacing the contents of his psyche.

He remembers as a newly free man, gathering the pieces he needed to build a makeshift sensor jammer to slip past the scanners at Tatooine's space port and hop a transport off-world. And given that they are currently walking into a recycling facility, under the guise of two average workers, the chances of him finding what he needs are high. Its just a manner of time...

Unbeknownst to him, there was a travelling caravan of refugees under the very duracrete they walk on...

"Ahh... I got an idea hatched. But..."

He pauses, halting both of their tracks abruptly. Not in protest, but in the name of solidifying his seriousness to the craziness he is about to lay out.

"I'll be straight witch'ya... I ain't as good with electronics as I am with engines, but- if I can find the pieces, could build a scrambler. They'll know somethin's up, that's for sure... But when they start sniffin' around, we can make 'em know it was us. Take the eyes off your woman for a few minutes. But we need to have our route planned 'fore any'a that goes on. I ain't gonna' shoot 'n scoot my way between the Troops and a trash compactor."

His gaze shifts around again, falling upon the guards whom- with weary eyes, either filled with a disdain for life, or a yearn for death, simply nod at the pair of outlaws, marching into enemy territory with no backup in sight. His nerves begin to set in, but he stifles them, composing himself to buck up and complete the job and get his payment.

He takes a long, slow drag from his cigarette, observing his surroundings now, focusing on the place, not the people. A stinking, rotting, rusting mountain of scrap, scrap, and more scrap. Hubert could cry tears of joy if it weren't for his warrants, and lack of time to truly paruse.

"If you can get in touch with 'er. I'd do it. Smoke 'em if you got 'em and all that."

He lets out a singular snicker, his teeth flairing again in a quick smile that disappears as quickly as it came to be. It's obvious that he's nervous, but he still hilds his head high as it pivots around in a nonchalant state of rising alarm.


"I'll need a few things. Set up right, I can make it traceable so they come'a runnin'. Now we can hide, but if they find us, it's gas on or pass on, fella'.

Transceiver, distortion projector, somethin' to create a static discharge... Ahh... Oh!- A power source, of course! Then it's processors and an antenna. Now I can make most'a that myself. But I'm gonna need a few. Give or take fifteen minutes. If we can find any if the parts, that could shorten it. The scrambler might cause a dump-fire but who care, right?"













 

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