Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Edge of the Abyss

Ana Rix Ana Rix

"That is if we are lucky, unlucky has the flies out when we are going and they take a nip spread a brain eating parasite." Aya said it as she tapped and brought up the charts. Her hand going to it as she directed with her finger to show. "This island chain here obscures it but there is another larger island, the black coast." She shrugged. "They aren't original with names but there is a river. Wide and used long ago by sailors. Going upriver takes time but it isn't the danger. The danger is the snakes, flies and monkey. The vines will hang over the river in places letting them get on the boats to steal anything not held down. Snakes as large as a hutt that will grab someone and pull them into the canopy or river. Then it will start to get in and the ruined cities are from older civilizations that we have had here. We'll have to walk through it and the path is narrow lined with dangers and riches... but they are cursed and many have died trying to claim them." She spoke as the ship was going. "My aunt is on the far side of the city in the gallery it is an old fortress and she hates visitors."
 
Ana listened in silence at first, one hand braced against the side of the craft as it cut through the calmer water, the other absently pushing wet strands of hair out of her eyes. Salt and river mist still clung to her clothes and skin, and she looked every bit like someone who had just survived something spectacularly unpleasant. She did not complain about it. She rarely did.

Instead, she focused on Aya's words.

Flies with parasites. Snakes the size of speeders. Monkeys that stole anything not bolted down. Cursed ruins and narrow paths.

By the time Aya finished, Ana had a fairly complete mental model forming in her head. It was not a comforting one.

She let out a slow breath through her nose, glancing at the charts as they hovered in front of Aya's hand.

"So," she said evenly, her tone dry but thoughtful, "we're dealing with hostile terrain, aggressive wildlife, biological hazards, unstable ruins, and a population that does not like outsiders."

She tilted her head slightly.

"And we're doing it while wet, tired, and carrying things everyone wants to steal."

A pause.

"Good. That's…efficient. Saves time."

There was the faintest hint of humor in her voice, the kind that only surfaced when things were objectively terrible.

She shifted her footing as the ship adjusted course, then glanced toward the dark line of islands in the distance, eyes narrowing slightly as she studied the silhouette of the Black Coast.

"If the river was used by sailors, that means there are predictable currents and sediment patterns," she continued, slipping naturally into analysis. "Which means certain sections will be safer than others, even if locals don't think about it that way anymore."

She looked back at Aya.

"Do we have any old maps? Trade routes? Logs? Anything pre-collapse?"

Then, after a beat: "Because if people keep dying in the same places, it's usually not a curse," she said calmly. "It's bad information."

Her gaze drifted briefly toward the canopy beyond the riverbanks.

"As for the wildlife…" She shrugged lightly. "If it bleeds, it follows patterns. Feeding routes. Territory. Nesting zones. We can work around that."

When Aya mentioned her aunt, Ana's expression softened just a fraction.

"An isolated fortress. On the far side of dangerous ruins. Run by someone who hates visitors," she summarized. "I'm guessing she's either very competent, very stubborn, or both."

A small, wry smile touched her lips.

"Which means she's probably our best chance of getting through this alive."

She adjusted her damp jacket and settled back against the railing, eyes forward now, steady and focused.

"Just…let me know when we reach the part where the brain-eating flies start," she added lightly. "I'd like a minute to emotionally prepare."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

"Sailor yes, maps no. These are places from before most islanders had homes. the first civilizations were much more advanced then island tribes that went with the seasons from island to island." She said it but was showing the map. "This is the best aerial image we have of the area and it is not good. The canopy from above is too thick in places, underwater sensors area attacked. Most of us just have for the old places stories and sometimes when you get brave you try and go there. It is said the riches from the treasuries could buy this planet a thousand times over. It has endured even with the storms aand the risks because it is something mysterious and older."
 
Ana studied the aerial image as Aya brought it up, her head tilting slightly as if she were trying to see through the canopy rather than at it. The resolution breaks, the occluded zones, the way the forest swallowed up everything beneath it all painted a familiar picture to her. Not mystery. Not magic. Just an environment that refused to be cooperative.

She nodded once, slowly.

"That actually explains a lot," she said, her tone thoughtful rather than disappointed. "Nomadic cultures don't leave clean data trails. Seasonal movement means fewer fixed landmarks, fewer permanent records, and a lot more oral history filling in the gaps."

Her gaze traced the dark patches where the canopy grew too dense for imaging.

"Which means the absence of maps doesn't mean the absence of structure," she continued. "It just means the structure isn't visible from the outside."

She glanced up at Aya briefly, then back to the projection.

"If the first civilizations were more advanced, they would have planned for this environment," she said calmly. "Thick canopy. Storm cycles. Hostile wildlife. They wouldn't have relied on surface visibility."

Ana lifted a hand, gesturing lightly at the image.

"Subsurface construction. Stone foundations. River-aligned access points. Thermal differentials in older materials."
A faint, almost curious smile touched her lips.

"If there really are cities and treasuries that survived this long, they're not hidden by accident."

At the mention of stories and people getting brave, her expression softened, not in disbelief but in recognition.

"Stories are data," she said quietly. "Messy, biased, incomplete data, but still data. Patterns repeat even when the details change."

She leaned back slightly, bracing herself as the ship moved, eyes still on the map.

"And the idea that the riches could buy the planet a thousand times over…"
She exhaled softly.

"That's exactly the kind of exaggeration that grows when something is real enough to tempt people, but dangerous enough that no one comes back with proof."

Ana finally looked out toward the horizon, where the dark green mass of the islands loomed closer.

"Whatever's there is older, yes," she said evenly. "But it's also engineered. And engineering leaves fingerprints."

Her eyes sharpened with quiet focus.

"If we pay attention, we won't need a map."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Aya looked at her as they were moving and the open waters started to shift. Seastone bringing them around as she moved and they were adjusting the domed shielding for water around the boats deck. The boat heading towards the island as Mistral was looking at it and the trees were thick, dark with shadow... and he could almost swear he saw things moving or eyes for a moment but then there was nothing as he blinked. Aya looking at him. "It isn't a trick, the islands haave eyes and old things that see far more." The repulsor boat slid upriver with a whispering hum, its anti‑grav field stirring the water into long, glassy ripples that reflected a sky the color of tarnished durasteel.

Jungle growth pressed inward from both banks, towering fronds and black‑barked trees leaning close as if drawn by curiosity or hunger. Vines hung in slow, tangled curtains, some thick enough to resemble dormant serpents, their tips brushing the mist that hovered over the river like a half‑remembered dream. Beneath the surface, something vast shifted long, sinuous shapes gliding parallel to the hull, their silhouettes thicker than hutt bodies and stretching for dozens of meters before vanishing into deeper shadow. The air was heavy, dense with rot and blooming life, carrying the metallic tang of old stone and stagnant water.

Sensors flickered intermittently, confused by mineral interference and ancient debris from crashed ships, boats and pieces of armor that could be seen buried deep beneath the silt. Far above, reptilian birds circled in slow spirals, their wings leathery and broad, swooping low to claw at carrion snagged on branches. The boat's lights carved pale corridors through the haze, illuminating drifting pollen, spores, and flecks of ash that suggested a fire no one had seen but the jungle still remembered. As the vessel pressed deeper inland, the ruins began to reveal themselves not all at once, but reluctantly, as though resenting the intrusion.

Cyclopean stone blocks rose from the riverbanks at crooked angles, their surfaces worn smooth by centuries of flood and neglect. Carvings still clung to them, eroded figures of beings no longer found in any archive, their elongated forms and hollow eyes staring eternally toward the water. Some structures leaned into the river, half‑submerged domes and fractured causeways vanishing beneath the slow current. Others loomed farther back, swallowed by vegetation, their once‑proud spires now wrapped in roots thick as starship cabling. Massive serpents coiled among those roots, their scales patterned like cracked obsidian, their movements slow and deliberate as they tasted the air with tongues the length of a man's arm.

Faint lights flickered within the stone at irregular intervals not active systems, but lingering echoes of forgotten technology, like embers refusing to die. The Force felt different here, heavy and layered, pressed flat by time rather than absent. It was watchful, patient, carrying the weight of rituals performed and promises broken. Even the boat's engines seemed to lower their tone, as if instinctively acknowledging that they were trespassing in a place that had never truly surrendered to decay. The canopy thickened as the river narrowed, branches interlocking overhead until the sky vanished entirely, replaced by a dim, green‑black twilight that pressed down like a physical weight.

The air grew colder, the mist thicker, and the water darker, its surface broken only by the slow rise of bubbles from unseen depths. Occasionally, a massive shape rolled just beneath the surface scaled, ridged, and impossibly long sending a tremor through the hull. Reptile‑birds dove between the branches, their talons snapping at smaller creatures that fled in frantic bursts of color. The jungle's earlier silence gave way to a low, continuous murmur: the rustle of unseen bodies moving through undergrowth, the distant splash of something heavy entering the river, the grinding of stone as roots shifted against ancient masonry.

The boat's lights struggled to penetrate the gloom, illuminating only fragments of the world ahead slick stone, coiled vines, the glint of predatory eyes watching from the dark. Every meter forward felt like a negotiation with the river itself, as though the water weighed their presence and had not yet decided whether to allow passage. The ruins grew denser still, rising from the riverbanks in jagged formations that resembled the vertebrae of some colossal beast. Black stone jutted upward in broken spires, their surfaces etched with glyphs that pulsed faintly when the boat drifted near. Some structures appeared melted, as though subjected to unimaginable heat.

Others were split cleanly down the middle, revealing hollow interiors filled with tangled roots and the skeletal remains of long‑dead fauna. A toppled archway lay half‑submerged, its keystone carved with a symbol that glimmered like wet obsidian. As the boat passed beneath it, the Force stirred slow, heavy, like a breath drawn after centuries of stillness. The sensation of being observed intensified, not by eyes but by presence, by memory, by the accumulated weight of a civilization that had risen, ruled, and vanished without witness. The river bent sharply, funneled between two towering monoliths whose surfaces were so dark they seemed to swallow the light.

Beyond them, the water widened into a basin choked with floating debris broken statues, shattered tablets, and the bleached bones of creatures too large to name. The central complex rose ahead like a mountain of black stone, its silhouette jagged against the faint glow of bioluminescent moss clinging to its flanks. Broken stairways spiraled upward, disappearing into the canopy, while others plunged directly into the river, their steps worn into shallow bowls by countless feet long turned to dust. Water dripped from unseen heights, echoing through hollow corridors in a rhythm that mimicked a heartbeat. The jungle had retreated entirely here, leaving only bare stone and black soil, as though the land itself refused to claim this place.

Symbols carved along the walls glimmered faintly as the boat approached, reacting to movement or perhaps to intent. The air grew colder still, and the mist thickened until it clung to skin like damp cloth. Something vast moved in the water behind them, sending a slow wave that rocked the hull. Ahead, the river disappeared into a cavernous opening at the base of the ruins, a mouth of darkness framed by fanged stone. The certainty that anything beyond this point still belonged to the living faaded from Mistrals mind as he had been watching all of his corners throughout the trip. The sides showed areas where boats could rest as Aya was bringing it in and close but she motioned as the large shark was grabbing a plank to move on.
 
Ana had been quiet for most of the approach, her usual habit of commentary and analysis subdued as the river drew them deeper into its shadowed throat. She stood near the edge of the deck, one hand braced lightly against a railing, the other resting near a console she no longer seemed to be actively monitoring. Her attention was fixed outward now, eyes tracking the slow, predatory movements beneath the water and the way the ruins emerged piece by piece, like memories clawing their way back into the present.

The longer they traveled, the more her expression shifted from academic curiosity to something sharper and more alert.

Not fear. Calculation.

She watched the flickering sensor readouts with a faint frown, noting the erratic interference patterns, the dead zones, the way entire sections of data simply dissolved into static.

"The mineral content alone would scramble half the survey satellites in the Core," she murmured quietly, more to herself than anyone else. "Dense basalt. Heavy metals. Probably layered with old energy conduits or crystal matrices underneath. No wonder nobody ever mapped this properly."

Her gaze lifted as one of the massive shapes rolled beneath the surface, the faint distortion rippling through the water.

"And whatever built this," she continued softly, eyes narrowing as they traced the half-submerged causeways and fractured domes, "didn't design it to be welcoming. Every structure funnels movement. Every approach narrows. Every open space becomes a kill zone."

She glanced briefly toward Mistral when he shifted, then back to the ruins.

"This isn't a lost city," she said. "It's a fortified system that outlived its occupants."

As the glyphs began to pulse faintly and the Force seemed to thicken around them, Ana felt it too, even without sensitivity. The pressure. The subtle wrongness in the air. The way sound seemed to hesitate before traveling.

She drew in a slow breath.

"Residual fields," she said quietly. "Old power networks, ritual sites, layered tech, and…something else. They didn't dismantle this place. They sealed it."

Her fingers tightened slightly on the railing as the cavernous opening came into view.

"Which means," she added, her voice calm but edged now with seriousness,
"whatever they were trying to contain either killed them…or convinced them it was safer to leave than to fight."

When Aya motioned, and the boat slowed, Ana finally looked back toward the others, meeting Aya's eyes briefly before nodding once.

"Alright," she said, steadying herself as the hull rocked. "If this place is watching us, then the worst thing we can do is act like tourists."

Her gaze returned to the dark mouth of the ruins, expression composed but intent.

"Stay close. Watch footing. Don't touch anything unless we all agree first." A faint, dry note slipped into her voice.

"And if something starts glowing that isn't supposed to, we leave. Immediately."

She shifted her weight, preparing to disembark when signaled, every trace of casualness gone now.

"Whatever this place is," Ana finished quietly, "it's still active. Just…in ways nobody remembers how to read."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral had to agree with that as Aya got the plank set down and she was moving. Looking at seastone and the shark as she spoke. "We'll be back... stay on the boat and protect it. We don't want to be trying to trek through the jungle.. there are far worse things in there." She said it and grabbed several weapons while securing them including a large blade. Mistral grabbed a rifle in case but had his swords as going across the plank they waited for Anaa and then seastone was pulling it back to not let things onto the boat. Aya started walking and leading the way. "There is more dangers here, it is why you'll find a few but rarely anything or anyone wants to be inside of the cities for long." Mistral had a small nod of agreement but he was more looking carefully around with a hand ready to throw a blade if they needed to fight.
 
Ana stepped onto the slick, age-polished stone as the boat's hum faded into the dense quiet of the ruins. Testing her weight against the warped rock and encroaching roots, she scanned the fractured glyphs and repositioned blocks with practiced precision, her eyes tracking everything from the canopy to the shadowed gaps below.

"That tracks," she murmured to Aya, moving into a protective pocket near Mistral. "High predator density, unstable structures, and residual energy. Together, they make this place self-policing; nature and time have been handling security for centuries."

She checked the wrist scanner as it hummed against the interference, her frown deepening.

"I'm seeing intermittent energy spikes. They are patterned enough to suggest dormant infrastructure waking as we pass. If anything reacts, it's just the city's old pressure plates responding to our presence."

A wry edge touched her voice as she fell into step behind Aya, her posture coiled and alert.

"Let's try not to remind this place how to defend itself. Lead on, and I'll watch the systems and the shadows."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral gave a nod of his head as he was walking and he took in the stone that still looked incredibly intact. Overgrown yes but it didn't seem as faded as one might imagine or eroded... if anything it seemed more alive before he followed a sound. Aya was looking at it and she stopped only to point. "A boat." She said it and there was a small slip with another repulsor boat tied up as she moved over by it and stopped only to look down. Kicking a clump of vine and plant over onto the boat as several things scattered from the sounds of it impacting the metal. Mistral was looking at what scattered and they looked like oily cats only the size of hounds and willing to dive into the water.

"Well that isn't impending." He said it while he was moving with Aya and Ana through more. Stopping as it sounded like something screamed, someone with a faint echo on the stone. He was looking as the firs signs came into view as his hand came up to motion. Then the other went to his blade as he held it for a moment with Aya motioning with herr head. She held the rifle at the ready while they were going and the sight had two things going around. The first was a large toppled over statue. The base showing a sunken pit filled with what looks like crimson waterrs for a moment until they got closer just passing it.

"Those rubies are the size of a newborn babe." Mistral said it looking and pointed more then tried to touch. The second sight was what drew Aya's attention as above on a pillar was whoever had been in the boat. "Looks like they thought so too." She said it as the person hanging had a necklace of the rubies suspending her like a grisly trophy. No signs of attack her their body hanging and Mistral spoke. "That is certainly a good reason to not take anything." He said it while walking with Aya pointing towards the doorways but she spoke. "Yeah, there is much more though that one is new. I have seen entire chambers filled from floor to ceiling with more."
 
Ana's pace slowed the moment the body drifted into view. Up until that point, she had moved with a careful, analytical curiosity—her eyes cataloging the intricate stonework and the selective way the vines clung to the ruins as if something beneath the jungle still remembered how the temple was meant to be maintained. But the sight of the hanging figure stopped her cold, catching her breath for a sharp second before she forced her heart rate to level out.

She came to a halt beside Aya and Mistral, her gaze tracing the grisly scene with a clinical, yet mounting dread. She took in the necklace of massive rubies and the way they bit into the cold flesh, noting the lack of wounds or signs of a struggle. The body simply swayed in the damp air, unnatural and perfectly displayed.

"That isn't about greed," Ana said quietly, her voice low and dangerously controlled. "That's about deterrence. Someone wanted this seen by anyone who dared to follow."

Her eyes flicked briefly toward the pit of crimson water before returning to the gems. "And if there are chambers full of those stones, then this place has been tempting people for centuries. It means whatever did this isn't random—it's consistent, and it knows exactly why people come here."

She exhaled slowly through her nose to ground herself, adjusting the strap of her pack with a sharp, decisive tug. Turning her gaze toward Aya, she spoke with a flat, plain urgency. "We shouldn't touch anything. Not the stones, not the structures, not even the debris. If this place punishes curiosity, I'd rather not test how creative it can get."

Taking a careful step forward, she kept close to the others, her eyes never stopping as they scanned the darkened doorways and the shadows lurking on the upper ledges. "Let's stay together," she added, her voice dropping to a grim murmur. "We get what we came for, and we leave, before we become part of the décor."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Mistral had to agree with that it wasn't about punishing them it was about sending a message. The crimson waters as they passed more he noticed it. "Not is not water." He said it and followed quickly. "Not blood either... that is more of those." He pointed from the pool of rubies to the ones around her neck. "Greed is sometimes a powerful motivator." He said it but moved with Aya as she spoke. "Yeah this is... this is just the surface stuff. There are other places, more ah you could say.. more rich in some cases. It is up ahead." She said it while they were movign and the city showed an arch that went up into the jungle and hugged a mountain side.

She stood there at the top of the pathway going up,not as a single person but as a living shrine to the forgotten and the drowned. Her silhouette a jagged tapestry of textures, draped in layers of sun-bleached calico and salt-rotted velvet that seem to hold the very moisture of the swamp within their fibers. Every movement she makes is accompanied by a rhythmic, metallic shiver the clatter of a thousand "trinkets" sewn into her bodice. Bleached bird skulls, tarnished silver coins, and vials of murky swamp water hang from her hips like grisly trophies. The fabric of her skirt is heavy with the grime of a dozen shores, trailing behind her like a lingering shadow.

To look at her was to see a shipwreck personified; she stood adorned in the debris of the city, yet she weard her rags with the terrifying elegance of a queen who has outlived her own kingdom. The most arresting feature is the untamed crown of her hair, a wild thicket of matted dreadlocks that defies the weight of gravity. Woven into the dark, tangled tresses are slivers of polished bone, dried sea fans, and strings of colorful glass beads that catch the torchlight like the eyes of predatory fish. Her face is a map of ancient mysteries, her dark skin dusted with a fine layer of white ritual ash that accentuates the sharp, feline curve of her cheekbones.

Across the bridge of her nose, faint tribal markings are etched in charcoal, giving her an expression of permanent, mocking wisdom. When she tilts her head, the heavy ornaments in her hair chime a low, hollow note a funeral dirge played by the wind reminding everyone present that she carries the weight of the spirit world in every strand of her being. Her eyes are two dark pools of ink, shimmering with a mercurial light that suggests she is viewing a reality far removed from the physical plane. They are wide and unblinking, framed by lashes caked in soot, and they seem to pierce through flesh and bone to weigh the very soul beneath.

When she finally parts her lips in a smile with Aya's approach, she reveals teeth stained a dark, earthy umber from the chewing of bitter roots and ritual herbs. That smile is a crooked, unsettling thing; it is both a welcome and a warning, revealing a blackened tongue that has tasted the secrets of the other place. Her hands, stained to the knuckles with indigo dye, rest restlessly against her sides, her long fingers twitching as if she is plucking invisible strings. She does not merely occupy the space she haunts it, standing with a predatory stillness that demands absolute, terrified silence. Mistral looked at her and then at Aya as he could see the family resemblance in their looks deep down.

"Auntie." Aya's voice came out as she spoke.
 
Ana had gone quiet as they moved deeper into the ruins, her earlier commentary fading beneath the place's growing weight as her eyes tracked the crimson pools, the glittering rubies, and the way the jungle pressed inward, as if trying to reclaim every careless step. She catalogued details with the automatic precision of a career info-broker, filtering for the patterns, anomalies, and warnings that always surfaced when she was faced with something unfamiliar and dangerously ancient.

However, when they finally reached the arch and the woman revealed herself, the sheer gravity of the figure's presence made Ana stall for half a step as her breath caught, just barely, in her throat. She took in the layers of rotted fabric and bone, the chiming trinkets that rattled with every movement, and the ash-dusted skin paired with ink-dark eyes that seemed to look straight through her. Every instinct in her body whispered that this wasn't just a person standing in front of them, but a living artifact of the very ruins they had walked into.

Shifting her weight subtly closer to Aya and Mistral, Ana recalibrated her sense of personal safety while her gaze flicked from the woman to Aya and back again in a frantic attempt to connect the dots. Slowly, she leaned in just enough for her voice to stay low, though it carried that signature dry humor she used to keep the tension from clawing too deep into her nerves.

"Is…everybody here an auntie? Because I feel like I've managed to miss several very important chapters of the family tree, and I'm currently trying very hard not to ask the wrong question first."

She straightened again, keeping her hands loose at her sides to project a surface-level calm, even as her pulse picked up while her gaze lingered on the woman's eyes, respectful and alert, as she waited for the next move.

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

"No she is family, though not entirely in a way you are thinking." Aya said it while she moved over and the woman looked at her for a moment. "Little one, you come all the way up here to me. Looking for ones that come. I am sure they are hanging around if you look." She said it and turned around motioning for them to be able to follow as Mistral looked a her for a moment and he mulled what she said as he looked at Ana. "Did she just... I am going to pretend I am not in over my head and know what is happening." He said it as Aya looked at him and Ana. "There is a reason why no one wants to come up here except treasure seekers... and a few brave kids. Wait until you see the really weird ones."
 
Ana let out a slow breath she hadn't quite realized she'd been holding, her shoulders loosening just a fraction as Aya and the woman began to move ahead. She watched them for a moment, eyes narrowing slightly as she tried and failed to slot the exchange into anything resembling a normal social framework.

Family, but not the way you're thinking.

That alone was enough to set off half a dozen mental notes she knew she wouldn't be able to resolve anytime soon.

When Mistral spoke, she glanced over at him, relief flickering briefly across her face at the sound of someone else voicing exactly what she was feeling.

She gave a small, crooked smile.

"Thank you," she murmured quietly. "I was worried it was just me."

Her gaze drifted back toward the retreating figure of the so-called auntie, taking in the way the woman seemed to blend into the ruins as easily as the vines and shadows themselves.

"Because I'm fairly certain that conversation broke at least three of my internal logic systems," she added dryly.

At Aya's comment, Ana snorted softly under her breath, shaking her head.

"That is…deeply comforting," she replied, only half sarcastic. "I love knowing we're still in the 'normal' section of weird."

She adjusted her pack slightly on her shoulder, squaring herself before following after them, her expression settling into focused alertness.

"Alright," she said more quietly, eyes scanning the ruins again. "Rule of thumb: don't touch anything, don't stare too long at anything, and if something starts talking that shouldn't… we let Aya handle it."

She cast Mistral a quick sideways look.

"Agreed?"

Then, with a small breath and a wry half-smile, she stepped forward after the others.

"Because I have a strong feeling this place is about to redefine my idea of 'really weird.'"

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

He gave a nod of his head. "I can agree with that." There was a look as they were going into a far worse place. The Lux would just kill them, quick likely painless... Sal would make it painful but he would be quick... even Kono's family would do it less as something violent then something that happens because. Here they had seen what it entailed... a display for others to see." The pathway leading into an older building set into the mountain itself and covered in old growth and trees. The smell of overly ripe fruit was there as AAya motioned them inside of the building with flames flicking inside. The woman turning to look at them when she stood there.

"What you seek a saw-toothed range of island, arranged in tiers like the teeth of a great beast, surrounding an island cast in the shape of a dagger. A long-extinct volcano forms the pommel of the knife and from its flanks grows a fortress, the oldest on the world, and the most accursed." She grinned though as Aya was looking at her. "That is where the offworlders one?" THe woman was looking at her while Mistral remained close to Ana in case but he was avoiding looking a anything too long. Her voice came out with humor. "There, over there... some are there and there. A few are here for stew." She laughed and Aya was watching her more nervously.

"They came to you?" SHe said it while looking around. The woman looked. "It is such a surprise, those who want to move around here always come up river, always try their hands at the blood rubies and always pay the price." She chuckled. "They want to take over outside of the storms. Kill more and make the world smaller." She said it. "But they don't know what we know." She picked up something and tossed it into the flames making a spark. "They think having a place here will protect them and went for the grandest of them all. Not knowing what will come for them or who will come." Aya looked for aa moment with a nod. "This is not going to be enjoyable."
 
Ana had been quiet through most of the exchange, her attention divided between the woman's words, the flickering firelight, and the oppressive weight of the place itself. The building felt wrong in a way she couldn't easily quantify, not just old, not just abandoned, but layered with too many memories and too many endings that hadn't been allowed to rest.

When the woman finished speaking, and Aya murmured her grim assessment, Ana let out a slow breath through her nose, fingers unconsciously tightening around the strap of her pack.

Her gaze moved from the flames to the strange woman's crooked grin to the darkened passageways beyond.

"No," she said quietly, more thoughtful than afraid. "It never is, when people convince themselves they can 'own' a place that's been here longer than their entire species."

She shifted her weight slightly, grounding herself, then glanced at Aya.

"If they went for the oldest fortress, thinking it would make them untouchable," she continued, "that means they don't understand this place at all. They're treating history like infrastructure instead of… a warning."

Her eyes flicked briefly toward the fire where the woman had thrown whatever it was, watching the sparks die.

"Which also means they're probably already in trouble," she added softly. "Whether we get there in time to make a difference is another question."

She looked back at Mistral for a moment, then at Aya, a small, determined line forming at her lips.

"So," she finished, voice steady despite the unease curling in her stomach, "we're walking into cursed ruins, hostile territory, and someone else's very bad idea."

A faint, dry huff of humor escaped her.

"Sounds about right. Let's not add our names to the list."

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

Aya gave her a nod of her head. "You got it mostly... we'll have to work on some of it and this is not going to be fun. If we are going to some of the oldest fortresses in the islands... it is more then cursed" She said it while turning around and motioning with a hand. "Goodbye auntie, we'll try and come to see you again." The only answer was a laugh for a moment as Mistral was going out to look at a few more things. Aya waiting for a moment as she spoke and started tro walk. "I really should ask for hazard pay... and overtime... and like a mountain of booze enough to poison a dozen zeltrons." She said it and Mistral looked at her as they were walking back into the city and staying close. "We know at least one thing... tey are down a few men."
 
Ana had been quiet through most of the exchange, standing just behind Aya and Mistral, her eyes lingering on the ruined stone, the drifting mist, and the way the shadows seemed to cling too closely to every surface. She hadn't liked the way the air felt in there. Not cold. Not hostile.

Heavy.

Like the place was holding its breath.

When Aya finally turned away and started back down the path, Ana released a slow breath she hadn't realized she'd been holding and followed, boots crunching softly against loose gravel and ancient debris.

At the mention of hazard pay and enough alcohol to poison a dozen Zeltrons, the corner of her mouth twitched despite herself.

"I support that proposal," she said dryly. "Entirely. In writing. With interest."

She glanced back once, just briefly, toward the dark mouth of the fortress before forcing her gaze forward again.

"If something is officially 'more than cursed,'" she added, adjusting the strap of her gear on her shoulder, "then it should automatically come with hazard bonuses, medical coverage, and a mandatory recovery period that does not involve jungles, ruins, or ritual shrines."

Mistral's comment made her expression sober a little.

"Which means they're either running scared," she said thoughtfully, "or doubling down somewhere worse."

Her eyes flicked between the dense ruins ahead and the narrow paths threading through them.

"Statistically," she continued, voice calm but edged with concern, "it's usually the second one."

After a beat, she glanced at Aya again, a faint, wry smile returning.

"When this is over," she added, "I'm voting for somewhere with walls, lights, and drinks that do not glow."

Then she fell back into step with them, alert now, every sense quietly tuned as they moved deeper into the city's shadows.

Mistral Mistral
 
Ana Rix Ana Rix

He looked at the two of them and spoke. "I barely make enough to keep the lights on and maintain a healthy supply of equipment. Hazard pay, interest, perks... these are fever dreams ladies.. the jungle might have gotten you both sick." He said it as a joke with a small look but the mention of them being scared. "They could be scared or don't yet suspect these people are missing..... which is good for us." He said it as going through it all they came back to the boat and Seastone and the shark were both bringing the plank back for them to get across. "Boss it has been crazy... did you know there was another boat of people? We saw the debris and worse we saw the bodies getting eaten."
 
Ana paused halfway onto the plank when Seastone spoke, her hand tightening briefly on the railing as the words sank in.

"…Bodies," she echoed quietly, more to herself than to him.

She glanced back toward the jungle, then toward the dark water, her expression sharpening from dry humor into something more focused and analytical.

"That means whatever's out here isn't just watching," she said evenly. "It's actively cleaning up."

She stepped fully onto the boat, boots thudding softly against the deck, and looked between Aya and Mistral.

"Which gives us two advantages," she continued. "They're distracted. And they think the jungle is doing their work for them."

A faint, wry edge crept back into her voice.

"Let's not prove them right."

Mistral Mistral
 

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