Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Before It Goes Wrong Again

Ana didn't like repeating mistakes.

She especially didn't like repeating ones that had ended with her on the ground, ribs bruised, lip split, and the distinct realization that information only mattered as much as your ability to walk away after delivering it.

The datapad in her hand cast a soft blue glow across the small workbench, lines of encrypted data scrolling in quiet, orderly patterns. Clean. Valuable. Dangerous in the way things always were when too many people wanted to control where it ended up.

She had already mapped the route. Twice. Then a third time, after she had forced herself to sit with the memory of how the last one had gone wrong, tracing each decision back to its origin until the flaw revealed itself not as chance, but as choice.

Too predictable. Too alone.

Her fingers hovered over the console for a moment, not hesitating so much as recalibrating, shifting variables in the same quiet way she approached everything else. Risk and efficiency were never opposites, just poorly balanced inputs, and this time she adjusted accordingly, introducing a factor she had deliberately excluded before.

Not because she needed it. Because it made the outcome cleaner.

A small sequence of inputs followed, routing the signal through layered relays until it dissolved into noise, untraceable and unremarkable to anyone looking. Only then did she allow herself a brief pause, her gaze drifting from the scrolling data to the reflection faintly caught in the dark edge of the screen.

There was still a faint shadow of a memory along her ribs if she looked closely enough. She didn't. Instead, she keyed the channel open.

"Ironwraith."

His name settled into the line without urgency, but not without weight either. There was a subtle shift in her tone that hadn't been there before, something quieter beneath the precision, as if familiarity had taken the edge off something she usually kept tightly controlled.

"I have a delivery."

The words came easily, but she didn't rush past them, letting the meaning settle in the space between them before continuing, her voice steady, deliberate, and just warm enough to suggest this wasn't purely transactional.

"The last time I handled something similar on my own, it ended inefficiently."

There was no drama in the phrasing, no embellishment, but the choice of words carried its own quiet honesty. Inefficiency did not begin to cover it, and she knew he would understand that without her needing to spell it out.

Her shoulder shifted slightly against the edge of the bench as she settled into it, her gaze flicking once toward the door out of habit before returning to the soft glow of the datapad.

"This one carries the same pattern," she continued, her tone smoothing into something more thoughtful now, less like a report and more like a decision being shared. "So I'm adjusting the variables before they become a problem."

A brief pause followed, not uncertainty, but consideration, the kind that acknowledged the space between them had changed since the last time they spoke like this.

"If you're available, I'd like you on the route with me." It wasn't framed as a favor or a necessity, but the way she said it made it clear this wasn't a casual ask either. It was chosen. Intentional. The same way she chose everything.

"Escort, deterrence, intervention if it comes to that," she added, though the words felt secondary to the request itself, more habit than requirement.

Her thumb brushed absently along the edge of the datapad, grounding the moment before she continued, her voice softening just slightly, enough to be noticed if one was paying attention.

"I'd prefer not to repeat the last outcome."

The corner of her mouth shifted almost imperceptibly, not quite a smile, but something close to it. "And you've already proven you're…effective in close quarters." The implication lingered there, understated but deliberate, before she let it settle back into the quiet hum of the connection.

"Compensation won't be an issue, and discretion is assumed," she continued, her tone returning to its usual measured clarity, though the warmth didn't fully disappear. "I can forward the details once you confirm."

She didn't press further after that.

She simply let the line remain open for a moment longer than necessary, her attention returning to the data as if the answer, whatever it would be, had already been accounted for in the way she had planned this.

Because this time, she intended to walk away from it.

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 
Across the city, Ironwraith leaned against the weathered brick of a low-rise, the dim orange glow of a streetlamp catching the edge of his unlit cigar. His flip lighter danced in his fingers, sparks briefly illuminating the contours of his mask. Steam hissed from vents nearby, and the faint hum of distant traffic filled the quiet night.

The comm beeped. He read her message and let a slow, crooked grin tug beneath his mask.
"Well, that saves me from wasting a good cigar," he muttered, flicking the lighter closed and pocketing it.
"Understood," he said, voice low and steady, a hint of amusement threading through. "Awaiting your command."

He pushed off from the wall and started walking. The city stretched before him in muted chaos, neon signs flickering, rain-slicked streets reflecting the glow, and the occasional echo of boots or distant sirens. Every detail was cataloged: light angles, shadows, possible cover, the rhythm of distant traffic. He muttered under his breath, half-calculations, half-commentary: distance, timing, potential hazards.

By the time he reached the perimeter of her location, he paused in the shadows of a narrow alley, checking his gear with meticulous precision. Concussion detonators clipped to his belt, extra power packs for the rifle resting on his shoulder, sidearm secured, blade sheathed. Every piece in place, every variable considered.

With a faint chuckle, he tapped the top of his rifle, glancing at the comm. "Ready as ever," he murmured. Then, with mock ceremony, he lifted his helmet and lowered it over his head, voice sliding through the comm: "Awaiting your command, ma'am," finishing with a crisp, exaggerated salute.

Fully kitted and alert, he stepped forward, letting the city fade around him as he approached, every sense keyed to the task ahead.

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 
Ana didn't answer immediately, her attention fixed on the street below.

From her vantage point on the second floor, she watched the movement through glass treated to blur fine detail without obstructing the view. She wasn't looking for faces; she was looking for breaks in the rhythm of the block, who lingered a second too long, who moved with a purpose that didn't fit the hour. Only when she was satisfied that the patterns remained undisturbed did she finally reach for the comm.

"You're early," she said, her voice a quiet vibration in the still room. There was no disapproval in the observation, only the faint acknowledgment of a variable she had already accounted for. "That's consistent."

Her gaze flicked from the street to the datapad resting beside her, where encrypted data continued its silent, dangerous scroll.

"Come up to the second floor, north side," she continued, her tone smoothing into a familiar precision. "Door will be unlocked. I'll open it when you get there."

Her fingers rested lightly against the edge of the device, grounding her as she listened to the mechanical hum of the building.

"No movement inside that shouldn't be here." She never used the word clear; in her line of work, nothing was ever truly clear. Her voice softened then, the professional edge giving way to something quieter and more personal.

"And Ironwraith…" She paused, letting the silence hold for a beat. "You can drop the 'ma'am.'"

The faintest trace of warmth lingered in her tone before she pulled back to the task at hand.

"Come up when you're ready. We'll review the route together one last time before we move."

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 

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