Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Edge of the Abyss

Ana Rix Ana Rix

Aya got across the plank with Mistral and gave a small nod of her head as they were casting off. "That is the goal, you've seen somethings that happen here. If people want to come they can't be stopped but we are not wanting to disturb some of the more dangerous elements here. Auntie mostly let us go." She said it as Seastone was getting them out of there and the sounds of the repulsors kicking into high could be heard when they were moving. Not the slow crawl but it was faster... just a little as the shapes under the brackish waters could be seen better. Mistral was looking at it as he was in agreement with one part... he was in way over his head, this had started so simple.

Aya spoke while plotting the next course. "This is not going to be fun, the good news we aren't going near the eye of the storm... the bad news is this might be worse as we'll have to go over land to reach it. The storm is where the fortress is but the cliff to the far side of it is the best way there and down without having to risk everrything navigating the rocks." She said it and looked up. "Unless you want to try and dock a ship in those waves?" It wasn't really a suggestion or question and Mistral gave a shake of his head. "No not interested, we could barely handle navigating at speed, docking would just seem... bad."
 
Ana had taken a seat along the side rail, one hand braced against the cool metal as the boat surged forward again. Her damp hair clung stubbornly to her cheek, and she brushed it back absently while watching the dark shapes slide beneath the surface like half-remembered nightmares.

She listened to Aya's explanation in silence, eyes tracking the shifting jungle and distant cliffs as if trying to map the danger in her head.

When Mistral finished, she finally spoke.

"…Is it terrible that I'm starting to wonder," she said quietly, not flippant, not dismissive, just honest, "if one woman's fate is really worth all of this?"

She glanced between them, searching their faces rather than challenging them.

"Storms, monsters, cursed ruins, people getting…erased out there," she continued softly. "We're stacking a lot of risk on top of each other."

Her gaze drifted back to the water.

"I'm not saying we shouldn't try," she added after a moment. "Just…trying to understand what makes her worth walking into all of this."

There was no judgment in her tone. Only concern.

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

"I have been asking myself that as well but all I keep coming around to is if we didn't do something there is a chance things could change for the worse. You saw how they operate, taking everything they can and then running the risk of possible collateral damage. Sal, his people, the island natives they might not be pristine but they are the better choice in a long line of dangerous ones. If one side gets disrupted and weak the hutts, the pykes could try and take over making a monopoly and then it might get even worse." He said it with a shrug as Aya looked at him. "See and you said you weren't much, this world exists on the delicate balance of all forces and a big enough disruption will cause a tidal wave that will only be ended likely with a lot of blood."
 
Ana listened without interrupting, her fingers tightening slightly around the railing as the repulsors hummed beneath her boots. The jungle slid past in blurred greens and shadowed blacks, but her attention stayed on Mistral and Aya.

Balance. Monopolies. Tidal waves. She exhaled slowly through her nose.

"So it isn't about one woman," she said at last, her tone thoughtful rather than argumentative. "It's about pressure points."

Her eyes shifted toward the distant line of cliffs they would soon be navigating on foot.

"You're not trying to save a person. You're trying to stop leverage from consolidating."

There was no accusation in it. Just analysis.

"If they get stronger here, they don't just get stronger here," she continued quietly. "They gain access. Routes. Resources. A foothold that tips everything else."

She gave a small nod to herself, as if the logic had finally settled into place.

"Fine," she said softly. "That I can understand."

Her gaze returned to Aya, steadier now.

"But if this world runs on balance, then we don't just charge in and blow a hole through it either. We move carefully. We disrupt the disruption."

A faint, dry breath of humor escaped her.

"No tidal waves."

Then, quieter still: "If we're doing this, we do it in a way that keeps the scales from tipping the other direction."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

He looked at her and shrugged. "I just know this, my original job was keeping tabs on the wife and that is what I am going to do.. if she happens to be helping dangerous elements well I am going to deal with them in some way be it getting them arrested or hopefully getting them to just walk away from their lives of crime. I hold no illusion about being a big hero or action star.. I am just a guy who can fight from time to time." He said it but there was a small grin on his face... a hint of a smirk when he did it as he knew he had gone through a lot so there was more he could do but he wasn't going to worry about that just yet. Aya shrugged. "I am getting to paid to so... I like credits."
 
Ana listened quietly as he spoke, her gaze steady on him rather than wandering to the shifting water or the looming silhouettes of the islands around them. There was something in the way he said it so plainly, so without embellishment, that made his words feel heavier than any attempt at bravado ever could have. No grand speeches. No talk of destiny. Just responsibility, accepted and carried because someone had to.

When he finished, she let out a soft breath through her nose, halfway between a thoughtful hum and a faint, tired laugh.

"You know," she said gently, "every person I've ever met who starts a sentence with 'I'm not a hero' usually turns out to be doing the most difficult part anyway."

She glanced briefly toward the jungle, then back to him, her expression calm but earnest.

"Keeping watch. Trying to steer someone away from something worse. Choosing arrest over revenge. That's… harder than just throwing punches and calling it justice."

There was no flattery in it. Just observation.

Then her lips curved faintly, her tone lightening as she flicked her gaze toward Aya.

"And I respect the honesty," she added. "'I like credits' might be the most transparent motivation I've heard all day."

She shifted her weight slightly, folding her arms loosely as she regarded them both.

"For what it's worth," Ana continued, quieter now, "I'm glad it's people like you two doing this. Not someone looking for headlines or glory."

A small, sincere smile touched her mouth.

"Seems like you're in it because you care. Even if you pretend you're not."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

"Yeah well don't tell anyone, this place is nice. It getting ruined is not exactly ideal even if there is some small wanting to see changes." Mistral said it while Seastone came out of the navigation cabin while she had a look on her face. "I have the coordinates, you might not like it but I have a really dumb plan to get past some of the patrols." She said it and her lekku twitched for a moment as Aya looked over at her. "How much am I going to hate what you do with my boat?" SHe said it and the twi'lek had a look. "Hey... I pay my way and technically it will be keeping your boat out of the line of blasters they might have sp that you are not getting holes blown in your ship." She said it and Mistral looked. "She is tell a version of the truth at least.
 
Ana shifted where she stood, one hand braced lightly against a nearby rail as the boat cut through the darker water. The wind tugged at loose strands of her damp hair, and she pushed them back absently as she listened, her expression settling into that familiar blend of concern and dry acceptance.

At Seastone's words, one brow lifted almost imperceptibly.

"A 'really dumb plan' that involves my continued survival is… not my favorite category of plans," she admitted mildly, "but it does seem to be the only kind we've been using so far."

Her gaze moved from Seastone to Aya, then to Mistral, taking in their reactions before she gave a small, resigned huff of laughter.

"Still," she went on, "if the choice is between a bruised hull and several new ventilation holes from blaster fire, I'm inclined to vote for 'bruise.'"

She tilted her head slightly toward Seastone, studying her more closely now.

"So…I'm going to assume this plan involves being somewhere we're not supposed to be, moving in a way we shouldn't be moving, and hoping no one notices?"

A faint smile touched her lips.

"Because if that's the case, at least it's consistent with the rest of today."

Then, more quietly, with genuine sincerity beneath the humor:

"Just…try not to turn the boat into spare parts. Some of us are rather attached to staying on it."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

The twi'lek looked at all of them as she stood there. "What you all make it seem like I am going to suggest we sail onto a volcano and plug it until enough pressure builds and we aare sent over the island... we are going to never leave the water... except when we do." She said it and Mistral raised an eyebrow as Aya looked at her. "What does that mean?" The twi'lek looked at her and had a look. "Okay so you know how the ruins have those water channels and chutes going from the mountain peak and it runs the water wheels for the city?" She said it and Aya looked at her. "I don't like where this is going." Seastone looked at her. "You haven't even heard my idea... so we're going to use the chutes and the water there to go over the island and get as much speed as wel can to climb it so we just have to go downhill and then we will cut a lot fo the danger out of the way."
 
Ana stared at Seastone for a long moment in silence. Not because she hadn't understood what she'd just said. Because she very much had.

Slowly, she reached up and rubbed at her temple with two fingers, as if trying to physically massage logic back into the situation. Her eyes drifted briefly toward the dark outline of the jungle and the distant rise of the mountains, then back to the Twi'lek.

"So…" she began carefully, choosing each word as if she were defusing an explosive, "let me make sure I'm interpreting this correctly."

She gestured vaguely upward with one hand.

"You want to take a repulsor boat… into ancient water chutes… built by a civilization that collapsed… on a mountain… during a storm… so we can launch ourselves over an island."

There was a pause. "On purpose."

Her gaze slid sideways to Aya, then to Mistral, silently checking whether she was the only one hearing this.

"Because," she added dryly, "from a purely technical standpoint, that sounds less like a 'plan' and more like something you see in accident reports under 'series of regrettable decisions.'"

Despite herself, a faint, incredulous smile tugged at her mouth.

"That said…" she admitted, exhaling slowly, "it is…disturbingly clever. If the channels are intact and the flow rate is stable, the kinetic assist might actually work."

She looked back at Seastone, brows raised. "Big 'if,' though."

Then, softer, half-resigned, half-amused: "Please tell me you've done this before. Or at least simulated it. Or dreamed about it very vividly." A beat. "Because I'd really prefer not to become a data point in why no one tries this twice."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

The twi'lek gave a look. "I have done it a thousand time." She said it and Aya looked at her as Mistral crossed his arms. She looked. "In my dreams and well as far as all the people in the ports know... I am awesome and tales of my exploits are far and wide." She said it while looking. "But it will totally work and think of it this way.. if we fail you get to tell me I told you so... or we all die horribly in an explosion... or get thrown from the boat when it is in the air and spins... or as we are trying to do this someone fires a missile launcher or several... Like there are a millions things that can go wrong and we only need one thing to go right... so you guys. I am saying... there is a chance."
 
Ana closed her eyes for just a second. Not in anger. Not in disbelief. Just…in quiet, exhausted acceptance of the universe doing whatever it wanted.

As she held the silence, a small, rhythmic tremor developed at the corner of her left eyelid—a sharp, involuntary twitch that betrayed the sheer amount of mental processing required to digest Seastone's "plan." It was the only crack in her composure, a tiny rebellion of her nervous system against the statistical nightmare they were about to walk into.

When she opened them again, she looked directly at Seastone, her lips pressed together in a thin, thoughtful line while the muscle near her eye gave one final, stubborn jump.

"I really appreciate your honesty about the 'dreams' part," she said dryly. "It explains a lot."

Her gaze flicked briefly to Aya and Mistral, then back.

"Also, listing six different ways we could die does not make me feel more confident," she added, mildly. "Just… more informed."

After a beat, she exhaled and gave a small, resigned shrug.

"That said…avoiding patrols and heavy weapons does sound better than driving straight into them."

A faint, wry smile appeared, though she reached up to ghost a finger over her eye, stilling the last of the twitch.

"So. Fine. I'm voting 'reckless optimism,' with a backup plan of 'hold on and scream quietly.'"

She glanced at Seastone.

"But if we survive, I'm absolutely cashing in that 'I told you so.'"

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral listened and he was kind of in shock and awe about it... not cause he was uncertain of it working but because as she listed what could go wrong he was preparing for a way to try and survive though the missile explosion, crashing explosion and getting thrown into things horrible didn't sound promising. He turned and looked at Aya as the woman was there. "It is your boat captain, I will go with whatever you choose for this though it does sound crazy." He said it and Aya seemed to be debating it. "I'm going to totally lose my boat in this but navigating the rocks, in a storm, with people watching and attacking is not going to be easy or possible and at least they won't see it coming. Fine do it and if we die... I promise I will do everything to make the afterlife terrible for you."
 
Ana let out a slow breath she hadn't quite realized she'd been holding, shoulders lifting and falling as she processed Aya's decision.

Well.

That was that.

She reached up and brushed a damp strand of hair back from her face, then glanced between the three of them, taking in Mistral's grim acceptance, Seastone's reckless confidence, and Aya's barely restrained dread.

"For what it's worth," she said quietly, her tone dry but sincere, "I think this is the most supportive threat I've ever heard."

Her eyes flicked to Aya.

"'I'll haunt you forever' is… very motivating."

A faint, nervous smile tugged at her lips, quickly tempered by focus.

She adjusted her grip on her gear and shifted her stance, bracing herself mentally as much as physically.

"Okay," she continued, more serious now. "If we're doing this, then we commit. No second-guessing halfway through. No freezing up."

She looked at Seastone.

"You get us through the chute."

Then at Mistral.

"You keep us alive if anything starts flying."

And finally, back to Aya.

"And you… try not to imagine your boat exploding long enough to pilot it."

She gave a small nod, more to herself than anyone else.

"Let's do the stupid, unexpected thing and hope the universe is feeling generous today."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral gave a nod, Aya looked worried but ready while she was going to her best place. The feeling of a storm as the waves were getting choppy and more. The storms were powerful as they were getting to the edge and seastone was looking at them all. "Come on, we'll be fine, or at least I will be and then I'll get on another ship... so we'll make it just fine." She said it and was in the pilots cabin closing the door as the windows darkened to obscure and hide her from Aya as well as seal the windows from sound and most importantly water spraying everywhere as the large shark looked from the front and spoke. "Captain we crashing again?"She said it as Aya looked at her for a moment and Mistral gave a nod. "Maybe... or we're all going to smash into a mountain so I'm ready."
 
Ana stared at the sealed cockpit door for a long second after it slid shut, watching the windows darken until Seastone was nothing more than a vague silhouette behind reinforced transparisteel.

That…was not reassuring.

She slowly reached up and tightened the strap on her pack, then checked the fastening on her jacket as if doing so might somehow improve her odds of survival. The boat lurched beneath her feet as another wave slammed into the hull, sending spray whipping across the deck despite the shielding.

She grabbed the nearest handhold without thinking, knuckles whitening around it.

"I really don't like that she said she'd be fine first," she muttered, eyes flicking toward Aya and Mistral. "That feels…statistically concerning."

Another jolt rocked the vessel, and she planted her feet wider, trying to mirror Ironwraith's lessons in balance and flow even now. Don't brace. Don't lock up. Stay loose.

Easier said than done.

She glanced at the shark, then back at the others, a thin, nervous smile appearing despite herself.

"If this ends with us embedded in a mountainside," she added dryly, "I just want it on record that I voted for 'not smashing into anything.'"

Her grip tightened again as the engines whined louder.

"Okay…okay…" she murmured under her breath, more to herself than anyone else. "Just…ride it out."

She leaned closer to the railing, bracing subtly without locking up, eyes fixed ahead as the storm closed in.

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral looked at her for a moment as the boat was moving and Aya shouted. "This is not going to be enjoyable." She had found a place to be as she gripped the rail with one hand and had her blaster at the ready. The waves were coming up when the ruins could be seen. Black stone that was uncovered, smoothed from centuries and rising like bones were dozens of chutes filled with streams of water. The drop of them just coming into the waves as they came up and when they receded showing waterfalls. Then there were lights, visible from speeders with people as several of the chutes had waterwheels in them. The one that they were going for wasn't showing any with Aya pointing.

"Hold on to something." She said it as the boats repulsors caught a wave and was rising higher and higher partially tipping.. the front repulsors and back loud as they were working to keep them balanced while flying forward and thy landed in the chute before gunning it. Going up further and further against the waters as Aya started to fire with the sounds of thunder into the larger lights that were along their pathway and able to illuminate them. Mistral saw what it was she was doing and followed suit while the boat was rocking from side to side and fighting against the water that was rushing down. His mind more racing as he could make out some of their things and they were trying to secure and fight against something in the buildings as the flash of rifles was masked with the thunder and lightning.
 
Ana felt her stomach drop the moment the chute came into full view.

Up close, it looked even worse than it had from a distance. The black stone walls rose on either side like the ribs of some colossal skeleton, slick with rushing water that thundered past them in relentless sheets. The current poured downward with frightening force, and they were about to drive straight into it.

Of course they were.

When Aya shouted for them to hold on, Ana didn't argue. She lunged for the nearest support rail and wrapped both arms around it, her pack thumping hard against her back as the boat surged upward on the wave. For a heart-stopping second, the deck tilted sharply beneath her boots, and she was certain they were about to flip.

"Oh no no no no no—" she breathed, voice lost in the roar of water and engines.

Then they slammed into the chute.

The impact rattled through her bones, a violent shudder that made her teeth clack together. Water sprayed over the sides in icy sheets, soaking her hair and jacket in seconds. The repulsors howled in protest as they fought the current, and the boat lurched wildly from side to side, scraping dangerously close to the stone walls.

Ana squeezed her eyes shut for half a heartbeat, then forced them open again.

Ahead, flashes of light cut through the rain and mist. Blasterfire. Shapes moving along the structures. People scrambling along platforms and ledges, trying to react through the chaos of thunder and rushing water.

Her breath hitched.

"They're…they're actually up there," she said hoarsely, half disbelief, half dread. "They picked this place on purpose…"

Another jolt threw her sideways, and she tightened her grip, knuckles aching as she fought to keep her balance. She crouched slightly now, lowering her center of gravity the way Ironwraith had taught her, trying not to lock up even as panic buzzed through her veins.

"I take it back," she added weakly over the roar, glancing toward Aya and Mistral. "Every bad thing I imagined about this plan was wildly optimistic."

Still, she didn't let go.

Her eyes stayed fixed forward, tracking the lights and movement through the storm, her mind already racing through possibilities, angles, escape routes. Even terrified, she was thinking.

Trying to be ready.

"Just…get us up there," she murmured under her breath. "We can panic later."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral was in most agreement with her as they were moving up the chute... he could feel the repulsors straining in his teeth as he was watching more of it. The boat heading up and Aya was strapping herself in so that she could return fire on some of the people they were passing who noticed them. Mistral finding a place with the railing to secure himself while he aimed and fire for a moment. "I hope she knows what she is doing." he shouted it and the sound was lost over the whine of the engines as they ascended the chute with a lurch. Taking a turn at speed.. and then he felt something as he looked for a moment. The mountain was getting further away from them and he realized they were flying.

The storms coming when a gust of wind slammed into them and they were twisting in the air. Aya holding on with both hands before he could feel weightless for a moment. His body feeling nothing when he wanted to float away.. and then they were coming down and the slam into the mountain sprayed rocks and dirt into the air all around them. He could see a section of the ship get ripped away for a moment while he was holding himself there as the boat started to roll as he pressed close. "Frak..." He shouted it as the storm continued to rage and he could see the top section of the boat get torn away as Aya and the shark was holding down when they started to go down the side of the mountain quickly.
 
The repulsors screamed into a strain so violent that Ana felt it rattle through her teeth—not as a metaphor, but as a bone-deep vibration that threatened to shake her loose from the frame. She clung to the railing with white-knuckled desperation as the chute narrowed and the storm above finally swallowed the sky whole, blinding her with a sudden wall of spray. Thunder cracked with a force that felt as if the air itself had split open, and when Mistral shouted, she could only catch the jagged shape of his words over the mechanical roar.

"I hope so too!" she yelled back, her voice instantly devoured by the engine's high-pitched whine.

Then, the world simply dropped away.

The mountain pulled back from beneath them, and for a sickening half-second, there was no resistance, no current, and no gravity. There was only air. Her stomach lurched into her throat as they went weightless, her boots lifting from the deck despite her grip. Instinctively, she reached for anything: metal, fabric, the rough texture of Mistral's sleeve, just as a gust hit them broadside. The boat twisted mid-air, and then they were falling.

The impact with the mountainside hit like a punch from a giant. Rock exploded around them while something tore free from the hull with a shriek of rending metal. The deck pitched violently, slamming Ana hard into Mistral's side as the boat began to roll.

"This is the worst plan!" she managed to gasp before gravity reclaimed them completely.

They didn't so much descend as tumble. The boat skidded over jagged stone before breaking into the dense rainforest canopy, where branches snapped like kindling, and vines whipped across them. The hull finally plowed into thick mud at the edge of the slope, but the momentum didn't stop; the entire craft gave way to a massive mudslide, carried downward in a roaring slurry of rainwater and soil. Ana lost her footing entirely as the railing was ripped from her hands, and she and Mistral went over the side together.

The world dissolved into a chaotic blur of brown, green, and freezing rain. She hit the mud hard, sliding on her side before something solid crashed into her, tangling their limbs as they rolled together down the hill, breathless and battered. The slide finally slowed to a wet, sucking stop at the base of the slope, leaving a long, stunned silence filled only by the patter of rain against leaves and the distant, dying groan of abused metal.

Ana blinked mud from her eyes, slowly becoming acutely aware of two distinct things: she was completely soaked and coated in sludge from shoulder to boots, and Mistral's face was currently pressed directly into her groin.

"…If you are checking for internal injuries," she said at last, her voice maintaining a calm that suggested deep, hovering shock, "I can confirm that is not where they are located."

She shifted slightly, trying to avoid sliding further into the muck, and braced one muddy hand against his shoulder to create some semblance of space.

"You're alive, I assume?"

Somewhere uphill, the storm continued to rage, indifferent to the fact that they had, technically, landed.

Mistral Mistral
 

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