Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!


You've been hit by... you've been struck by...




QGbJRqz.png

Some people survive on luck. Kinley Pryse survives on bad decisions and pure spite.


Nar Shaddaa never smelled clean, but the High Security Lockdown managed to make the rest of the moon seem pleasant by comparison. The district loomed around Kinley Pryse in layers of durasteel, and armed checkpoints. Security towers watched every intersection while patrols moved through the streets with the mechanical precision of predators that knew their prey had nowhere left to run. The entire sector felt less like a neighborhood and more like a cage.

Which was fitting, because somewhere inside that cage was Flint Chapin.

Kinley adjusted the collar of her jacket and stepped around a puddle of something she didn't care enough to identify. She'd crossed half the moon tracking down leads, favors, and debts just to confirm what she'd already suspected. Flint had gotten himself arrested.

Again.

Most bosses had the courtesy to avoid prison. Flint treated incarceration like an inconvenient business trip. The worst part wasn't that he'd gotten himself locked up. The worst part was that it had become her problem.

A toothpick rolled from one side of her mouth to the other as she walked. Flint owned ships, businesses, people, and enough secrets to start a small war. Kinley happened to fall into the "people" category, which meant when the Black Sun underboss managed to land himself in a detention block surrounded by enough security to hold a Hutt kajidic hostage, she got to be the poor soul sent after him.

Lucky her.

A pair of security officers passed on the opposite side of the street. Kinley didn't look at them. They didn't look at her. Everyone pretending not to notice everyone else was usually a good sign on Nar Shaddaa.

She'd gotten into the district easier than expected. That bothered her. Nothing worthwhile was ever easy.

Getting out would be the difficult part.

The extraction route depended on a corrupt security officer who'd been paid a substantial amount of credits to look the other way at exactly the right moment. Maybe the man would honor the arrangement. Maybe he'd decide he could earn more by selling them out. Maybe he'd try both.

Kinley hated maybes. Especially when they wore badges.

Her hand brushed the grip of where the blaster should have been beneath her jacket as she turned down another crowded thoroughfare. This place might look like a district, but it was secretly part of the prison, and that meant no weapons. Well, not the obvious ones anyway.

Neon advertisements buzzed overhead while distant sirens echoed between the buildings. Somewhere in this mess was Flint Chapin, and if she was very unlucky, he'd be enjoying himself.

With a sigh that sounded dangerously close to a growl, Kinley disappeared deeper into the lock down district and began asking questions.

She just hoped that dirty cop was making the preparations to get them out.











A Smooth Criminal

 

pEhFT9F.png

Location: High Security Lockdown, Shadow Town, Nar Shaddaa
Tags: Kinley Pryse Kinley Pryse


V2exwdJ.png

A few drops of acidic rain tapping on the window of the train car turned drew Harvey’s attention to the glass first, then the neon glow beyond it, right before the drizzle turned to a proper shower outside. Shadow Town had all the same glam and lights as the rest of the moon, but it was just a dolled up prison the size of a neighborhood. Made the detective glad he was riding in on the railspeeder and not roughing it on the ground. Harvey was getting too old for that chit, and besides his knees aching when it rains, there wouldn’t be any cute alien ladies to bring him drinks.

Thanks, sweetheart,” he said with a wink as a near-human woman with lavender skin poured a fresh cup of caf from her rolling cart. She passed the paper cup with a nod. “Your stop’s next, Officer Denson. Is there anything else you need?” Harvey smiled, then shook his head. “Nah, I think I’ll manage.” He took a generous sip and sighed. Few things in the galaxy felt the same as the first sip of good coffee. Maybe whiskey, but it was too close to tell.

Thankfully, the last sip was just as good as the first—and it went down just as the scenery outside began crawling to a stop. “You have a nice evening, Officer.” The woman spoke warmly but moved with corporate precision; his name might carry some weight, but serving passengers was a business and she needed to clear him out to make room for the next.

Do the same,” he said as he slipped a few cred sticks in her apron pocket.

The rain hadn’t slacked as much as he’d like, but Harvey’s trench coat was made of fine thranta leather—a bit nicer than his wallet would call worthwhile, but the perfect onboarding gift from his commanding officer. Captain Kazden was a gritty old bothan, a real hard ass with a chip on his shoulder, but he cared about his unit and looked out for his guys. That made him a rarity on the Smuggler’s Moon, but Harvey hadn’t questioned it. Whatever it was that kept an honorable man on the force in a place like this was too dangerous for the new guy to look into.

Especially when Harv was walking down the station with eyes peeled for a Black Sun contractor in need of a skeleton key to the prison. He’d half a mind to light up a cigarette, were it not for the rain. His shoulders slumped under the weight of nicotine’s absence as he carried on toward the meeting.

 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom