Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Even the Stars Feel Quiet

Two days had passed since the Vigo had settled into its quiet orbit. The ship felt different without him.

Dean had not realized how much of the vessel's life came from Rynar's presence until it was gone. His boots moving through the corridors, tools clattering somewhere in the workshop, the low hum of music leaking from an open hatch, the occasional muttered argument with a piece of machinery that had offended him in some personal way. Even his sleep had been loud in its own quiet way, the small shifts and restless turns that had become a familiar rhythm beside her.

Now the ship moved with a cleaner silence. Not empty exactly. Just… still.

The cockpit lights cast their usual soft glow across the controls while the viewport showed the slow drift of stars sliding past the ship's nose. Dean sat in the pilot's chair, one leg tucked beneath her, a datapad balanced loosely in one hand while the other rested on the armrest.

The Vigo ran perfectly. Rynar's maintenance had always bordered on obsessive, but Vael's repairs had pushed the ship into a rare state of calm efficiency. Power flowed smoothly through the couplings, the sensor array hummed without protest, and even the environmental systems ran with the quiet steadiness of something that had finally been given the attention it deserved.

It meant there was very little left for her to fix. Which meant there was a lot of time to think.

Dean set the datapad down on the console and leaned back slightly, her eyes drifting toward the empty co-pilot seat beside her. She had caught herself glancing at it more than once over the last two days, expecting him to be there with his boots propped up on the console and a mug of something terrible balanced in his hand while he argued with the navigation computer.

The chair remained empty.

A soft thump sounded behind her.

Dean didn't turn right away. Cupcake had been stalking a loose tool for the better part of ten minutes, and judging by the sound of it, the nexu had finally decided the object was an enemy that required decisive and possibly terminal action.

Another thud followed. Then a metallic clatter that suggested the tool had lost the battle.

Dean closed her eyes for a moment and exhaled through her nose, the kind of breath that came from someone who had been alone just long enough for the silence to start settling into her bones.

"Cupcake," she said, calm and even. The cockpit went still. Slowly, she turned in her chair.

Cupcake stood in the middle of the floor with the defeated wrench pinned beneath one paw, her wide golden eyes fixed on Dean with the earnest innocence of someone who had absolutely not been doing anything questionable.

The wrench shifted under her weight. Cupcake's ears twitched.

Dean regarded her for a long moment before rising from the chair. The movement felt heavier than it should have, as though the quiet of the last two days had settled into her limbs.

"You have defeated the wrench," she said softly. Cupcake blinked, triumphant.

Dean crouched and retrieved the tool, setting it back on the console. The nexu immediately leaned forward and bumped her head against Dean's shoulder, demanding recognition for her valor. Dean let her.

Her hand lifted automatically, fingers sliding through the thick fur behind Cupcake's ears. The rumbling purr that followed filled the cockpit, warm and alive in a space that had felt too still for her liking.

"You are supposed to be guarding the ship," Dean murmured.

Cupcake's tail flicked, clearly interpreting this as praise.

Dean straightened slowly, her hand lingering at the nexu's neck before she stepped back toward the pilot's chair. The empty co‑pilot seat sat beside her, quiet and patient, the way it had been for two days.

Outside the viewport, the stars drifted past in their slow, indifferent way.

Two days.

Korda would still be arguing with medical staff. Rynar would still be trying to keep him from doing something reckless. And she would still be here, orbiting in place, keeping the ship running because that was what she knew how to do.

She lowered herself into the chair again, her gaze drifting once more to the seat beside her. The silence pressed in gently, not hostile, just present. The kind that made her too aware of her own breathing.

"He will come back," she said quietly, more to the room than to herself.

Cupcake, apparently satisfied that the wrench had been neutralized, climbed onto the co‑pilot seat and circled twice before settling exactly where Rynar normally sat. Her tail curled neatly around her paws as she looked out the viewport with the solemnity of someone assuming an important post.

Dean watched her for a moment, something soft and tired flickering behind her eyes.

Then she leaned back, letting the hum of the Vigo fill the space around her.

The ship held its orbit. The stars drifted. And the quiet settled in again, familiar and heavy, as she waited.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar Solde lay on the narrow bunk, one boot hooked loosely over the other, the durasteel frame creaking faintly whenever the outpost shifted under distant artillery vibrations. The mattress beneath him was thin enough that he could feel the cold structure of the cot through his armor, but after two days on a forward operating base in the Outer Rim, comfort had stopped being a meaningful concept.

His helmet rested on the small crate beside the bunk.
He hadn't taken the rest of the armor off.

Across the narrow aisle, another bunk faced his. Korda sat on it, bare from the waist up, the dark lines of fresh stitches cutting across his torso where vibroblade and blaster burns had opened him days before. The gashes had been closed by hurried field medics, the uneven thread still stark against scarred skin that had already lived through more battles than most soldiers ever would.

In his hands, a vibroblade moved with slow, deliberate rhythm.
Stone against metal whispered quietly in the dim barracks light.
The blade slid. Turned. Slid again.
The sound repeated with steady patience, the kind that came from a man who was more comfortable preparing for the next fight than recovering from the last one.

Rynar watched the motion for a few seconds from where he lay, the familiar rasp of sharpening steel filling the quiet between them. The outpost itself wasn't loud right now. Most of the troops stationed here were resting between rotations, the halls outside reduced to distant boots and the occasional burst of static from a comm unit.

Too quiet for a place built for war.
He exhaled slowly through his nose and rolled onto his side, reaching toward the small holodevice resting beside his helmet. The compact unit flickered to life in his gloved hand, its faint blue glow reflecting across the matte beskar plates covering his arms.

Two days.
Two days since Korda had been dragged into the field hospital and nearly fought the medics trying to stitch him together. Two days since Rynar had been told, firmly, that someone needed to stay nearby in case the stubborn Mandalorian decided to ignore medical orders and wander off into the next firefight.

Someone had apparently meant him.
His thumb hovered over the comm pad for a moment before he finally keyed the frequency he knew by heart.
The signal leapt from the FOB's antenna array into the void, crossing the quiet distance to the ship drifting patiently in some distant orbit.

Back aboard the Vigo, the cockpit console chimed softly as an incoming transmission pushed through the ship's comm system.
A familiar ID tag blinked across the screen.
FUTURE HUSBAND: RYNAR
it was a funny little thing he had programed into the Ship for contacts

Back in the barracks, Rynar pushed himself upright on the bunk, forearms resting on his knees as the holodevice projected the outgoing signal. His armor creaked faintly with the movement, the plates still dusted with the fine grit of the outpost's landing field.

His helmet remained off, dark hair slightly flattened where it had been earlier.
The comm indicator pulsed while the signal attempted to connect.
He found himself hoping she was actually in the cockpit.
Or at least somewhere near the comm panel.

After a moment, he leaned forward a little closer to the projection field, one brow lifting as the connection line continued to blink.
"C'mon, Dean…" he muttered quietly.
Another pulse.
Then the transmission stabilized.

Rynar tilted his head slightly toward the projector, the corner of his mouth pulling into a faint, tired smirk.
"Just checking in," he said, voice carrying easily through the small device.
A beat passed before he added, dry as ever,

"Tell me the Vigo isn't on fire."

Deanez Deanez
 
The Vigo had settled into the quiet rhythm that came with long waits in open space.

Systems hummed softly through the ship's frame, a constant low vibration beneath the deck plates that had become so familiar Dean barely noticed it anymore. Outside the viewport, the stars drifted slowly across the darkness while the cockpit lights cast their steady glow over the consoles.

For the past two days, the ship had run with a kind of peaceful efficiency, almost too peaceful.

No hurried repairs. No sudden course corrections. No tools clattering across the deck while Rynar argued with a stubborn piece of machinery.

Just the ship. And Cupcake.

The nexu occupied the co‑pilot's chair with the complete confidence of someone who had decided this had always been her seat. Her tail hung over the edge, flicking lazily as she watched the slow movement of distant stars. Dean sat beside her, one hand resting lightly against the console while the other held a datapad she had been reading for the better part of an hour. Or pretending to read. The words had begun to blur together some time ago.

The ship chimed.

Her eyes lifted immediately. Too quickly, if she'd been paying attention to herself.

The incoming transmission blinked softly across the comm panel, the identifier appearing in clear text.

FUTURE HUSBAND: RYNAR

Dean's expression remained calm, but something eased in her chest, a small shift she didn't allow to reach her face. Cupcake's ears twitched at the alert, as if she too recognized the name.

Dean reached forward and accepted the connection just as his voice filled the cockpit.

"Just checking in. Tell me the Vigo isn't on fire."

She leaned back slightly as the projection field activated, the dim blue glow resolving into his image. For a moment, she simply looked at him. The barracks behind him, the armor he still hadn't removed, the faint exhaustion around his eyes that she had been expecting but still disliked seeing.

"You will be pleased to know," she replied, her voice steady in the quiet cockpit, "that the Vigo remains structurally intact."

A small pause.

"The ship has not caught fire."

Cupcake lifted her head and chuffed, offended in principle. Dean glanced toward the nexu, the faintest hint of warmth touching her eyes before she returned her attention to the holoprojection.

"Cupcake did attempt to conquer a wrench earlier," she added. "But the situation was resolved without structural damage."

Her gaze settled on him again, more searching now.

"You appear tired," she said quietly. Not a reprimand. Not even a concern spoken aloud. Just the truth, offered gently. Her eyes drifted briefly to the stitches across Korda's chest in the background before returning to Rynar.

"How is Korda behaving?" A beat passed. Then, in the same calm tone she used for everything else, she added, "Is he following medical instructions… or are you currently preventing him from starting another fight?"

Her voice remained even, but the silence beneath it, the one she'd been living in for two days, lingered like a shadow at the edge of the cockpit lights, soft and familiar and heavier than she would ever admit.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 

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