Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Footprints in the sand

Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse was looking at her while she laid there and gave a nod of her head, finding a small place to stretch out. "Figures I would meet someone who wasn't asking me to do a whole lot and is reassuring in a situation like this." The joke was weak but it was at least something to distract as she laughed a little to herself to move and warm up. Seeing the fire and dusk as it was coming faster now at least. "At least neither of us are in this alone aand who knows what will come tomorrow." She was dozing off mostly in a good way and to let the force energies heal her. A small trance that she could recover herself in and hopefully be able to use it tomorrow much better. Jesse let her mind drift off a little remembering mostly what had come after she was attacked but there had been good she was alive and the living had a lot more chances then the dead.
 
Seren watched her for a moment longer, making sure the way Jesse settled was the kind that came from trust rather than collapse. Only then did she shift her own position, easing back against the stone where the fire's warmth reached without biting too sharply into the night air.

"You're right," Seren said quietly, her voice low enough not to pull her fully back from that drifting edge of rest. "And sometimes that's enough. Not being pushed. Not being alone."

As Jesse's breathing evened out, Seren let her awareness spread outward in a controlled, familiar way. Not reaching far. Just far enough.

The shadows nearest the fire responded first, stretching subtly, thickening where the light thinned. They did not move like figures or creatures. They simply settled, deepening along the rocks, pooling near the edges of the camp, threading themselves into the uneven ground where footprints would be obvious, and movement would disturb the balance.

Seren's hand rested loosely at her side as she guided them into place, not commanding so much as arranging.

"Nothing dramatic," she murmured, almost to herself. "Just awareness."

The shadows took on purpose without presence, darkness where darkness already belonged, angled to break silhouettes, to catch motion, to whisper warning through instinct rather than sound. Anything approaching would feel watched long before it was seen.

Only when the perimeter felt complete did Seren allow herself to relax, her shoulders easing, her breathing slowing to match the quiet rhythm of the night.

"Rest," she added softly, a reassurance rather than an instruction. "Tomorrow can wait."

She leaned back, eyes half lidded, remaining awake just long enough to confirm the shadows held steady, silent sentinels keeping watch, before allowing the night to take its turn holding them both.

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

She gave a nod with that and closed her eyes, the hibernation trace coming to her while she stilled and breathed in and outwards. Letting the force settle throughout her body. SLowly she drifted off as she dreamed of home. Alderaan as the plains were there outside of their estate and everything was at peace. She knew the core was not at peace but it was a dream and she was used to enjoying the benefits of things being idealized within them. She waas traveling with some of her family and things were very different, she hadn't been like toria or the others but she had gotten along with them. The family was a wonderful thing with all of their diplomatic efforts. She was sleeping herself until she felt warmth on herr face from the sun in the skies above and realized how long she had slept.
 
Seren noticed the change in Jesse's breathing almost immediately—the subtle shift that came when someone let the Force take the weight instead of fighting it. She did not interrupt. Hibernation trances were earned, not indulged, and Jesse's body had clearly decided it was time.

She moved quietly after that.

While Jesse slept, Seren put the hours to use. She inventoried what they had salvaged the day before, pared it down to what could be stretched without waste, and prepared a simple meal over low heat—nothing heavy, nothing that would shock a body coming out of rest. Protein softened with water, a small amount of preserved grain, and enough warmth to settle nerves and muscles alike.

She also scouted.

Not far—never far enough to break the line of retreat—but enough to read the land again. She checked the shoreline, the rocks, the treeline beyond. Wind direction. Tracks old and new. Nothing close. Nothing urgent. The kind of quiet that meant they still had margin.

By the time the sun had climbed higher and Jesse stirred, Seren was seated near the fire, food set aside and covered, attention outward but unstrained.

When Jesse finally woke, Seren looked up, already knowing how long she'd been under.

"You were out for a while," she said calmly. "Long enough that your body needed it."

She nudged one of the containers closer with her foot.

"I made food from what we recovered yesterday," Seren continued. "Nothing fancy, but it'll ground you before you try to move too fast."

Her gaze flicked briefly toward the horizon, then back.

"I walked the nearby area while you slept," she added. "No immediate threats. No fresh signs close enough to matter yet. We still have breathing room."

She studied Jesse for a moment—not probing, not prying, just checking alignment.

"Dreams like that usually surface when someone finally stops bracing," Seren said quietly. "Take that as your body recalibrating, not drifting."

She leaned back slightly, posture relaxed but attentive.

"Eat first," Seren finished. "Then we decide the next move. There's no reason to rush while the day is still on our side."

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse looked at Seren as she was waking up and she gave a nod of her head. Her breathing felt better and easier... mind more clear as she shook off that groggy feeling you get from just waking up even if it was a meditative trace with the force. The food was good, it felt like heaven even when compared to the memories of the finest places in the galaxy. She ate it moderately not quick but she wasn't doing dainty bites of it while she looked around and with a clear head she would be able to see a lot more she was certain. "Don't suppose you saw where to start aand look for water... or a sign for some sort of resort in the distance that we arre just on the far side of an island for?" She said it as humorr to lighten the mood morre then anything but she finished the food and knew they needed to find water.
 
Seren finished chewing before she answered, unhurried, clearly awake now in a way that went deeper than sleep. She set the remainder of her portion aside and reached for a canteen, checking its weight out of habit before sealing it again.

"No resorts," she said dryly, a faint curve touching her mouth. "If there were, I suspect we would have heard generators, seen traffic, or noticed the distinct absence of discomfort by now."

She shifted her position, rising enough to get a better view of the terrain, eyes scanning the land with purpose rather than hope.

"But water leaves signs," Seren continued, her tone settling into something more practical. "Vegetation thickens where it lingers. Sand darkens where it holds moisture longer than it should. Birds circle. Insects gather. Even stone erodes differently."

She nodded toward the lower ground beyond their immediate shelter.

"I saw a shallow cut in the terrain when I scouted earlier," she said. "Not a stream anymore, but it likely carries runoff when the tides or storms shift. That's where I'd start."

A brief glance back at Jesse, steady and reassuring.

"We won't rush it," Seren added. "Clear heads find water faster than desperate ones. We'll follow signs, not wishes."

She picked up her pack and stood fully now, stretching once before settling it onto her shoulders.

"Give me a few minutes to break camp properly," she said. "Then we move. Light, observant, and ready to turn back if the land tells us to."

Her gaze softened just a fraction.

"You did well resting," Seren finished quietly. "That will matter more than you think."

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

She gave a nod of her head to that, the presence of water would show them well before they found it. She finished and stood up finally. "Alright then." She said it and was looking at the pod they had been airing out and checked it. It smelled better at least and searching there was a few things intact but she was mostly looking at the door. of the pod as it could be secured enough to not let things in. Dropping off some of the supplies that they wouldn't need for large exploring and slimming it down to the essentials with backups here. Jesse gave a nod of her head to Seren while she was going to the rocks and stood up. "Alright, I am ready and out little place should be good for the time being."

Jesse said it and moved as she was retrieving the sled itself. With a nod of her head while she was bringing it down. Seren's scouting would help them before so that they could move around better. They had a mental map of some of the coastline at least and a place to return to. This was the best establishing moves going forward. Jesse stood in the sand for a moment as she checked herr outfit and the silks were dry, warm against her skin as she was moving now. Able to pull the sled faster but she wasn't rushing.. she was moving down the coast with a nod. "Alright, where was the last place you were able to scout?"
 
Seren answered with a calm nod of her own, already turning her attention back down the shoreline rather than the pod. She took in the way the sand shifted near the waterline, the pattern of debris, the subtle darkening where damp ground lingered longer than it should.

"I went as far as the headland beyond the next curve," she said evenly. "Not close enough to commit us to it, just far enough to listen."

She stepped closer to the surf, boots skirting the edge where foam thinned into wet sand.

"There's a shallow cut in the rock there," Seren continued. "Nothing dramatic, but the stone is darker and the vegetation changes. That usually means runoff, even if the source is inland. If there's a stream, it's feeding the coast somewhere past that point."

Her gaze lifted briefly toward the tree line before returning to Jesse.

"I didn't push farther alone," she added, not as an apology but as a simple fact. "Better to map it properly together than rush and miss something that matters."

She shifted her grip on the pack, posture settling into readiness rather than urgency.

"The camp should hold," Seren said. "We've marked our return, light won't betray us, and we know the ground well enough now."

A faint, practical curve touched her mouth.

"Let's start with the headland," she finished. "If there's water, it'll announce itself long before we see it."

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse gave a nod of her head to that as she was moving and following the location that was mapped. Jesse was looking at it and around as she was keeping her mental map going. Noting what Seren was talking about and following it with her eyes first to see it it curved and followed the coastline better. She could follow it a little and it went in while she was moving with it further in. She moved carefully as she was checking on more of it as well as into the trees themselves. "I was on Dxun once, the mandalorian clan we were meeting to scare us talked about this things in the trees. Since people aren't always looking up they are predators that just wait and then drop on your head."

She was listening as she could feel the force and the energies here. She felt it while she was moving and there was something there... something in the back of her mind for a moment before she moved and the jungle got a little darker as the canopy thickened this far in. She could see debris where it had fallen through and broken brranches. The runoff waas able to be followed and she could hear the sounds of water splashing as she crouched motioning for Seren. She was looking at more of it as the water pooled into a lagoon that she checked on it. The dense jungle lagoon erupted in violence as the colossal alligator twenty feet of primordial fury launched from the black shallows.

Its massive body was a living fortress of armored hide: scales the deep, mottled gray-green of ancient swamp mud, each plate thick and ridged like weathered stone, crisscrossed with pale scars from long-ago battles and dotted with clinging barnacles and leeches. The beast's broad head rose high, nostrils flared, revealing a gaping maw lined with rows of ivory-conical teeth some broken, others razor-sharp and stained yellow framed by raw pink gums and a flicking black tongue. Yellow-slit eyes burned with cold predatory focus, pupils narrowed to vertical slits against the dappled light filtering through the canopy.

Its powerful tail, thick as a man's torso and banded with darker stripes, whipped side to side, churning the water into frothy chaos and sending sprays of dark droplets arcing through the humid air. Twenty feet behind the frontline defender stood her charge: the younger survivor, a slender woman in her early twenties, skin a pale ivory now marred by the crash's brutal aftermath streaked with crusted dried blood across her cheekbones and collarbone, smeared with thick black mud that clung to her like tar. Her hair fell in long, sodden waves of ash-blonde, darkened by water and grime to a dull honey-gold at the roots, strands plastered to her neck and shoulders in tangled ropes.

Wide hazel eyes, rimmed red from shock and exhaustion, stared in frozen terror; delicate features high cheekbones, small straight nose were smudged with filth, lips parted in a silent gasp. Her torn flight suit, once crisp white and gray, hung in ragged strips: one sleeve gone entirely, the other shredded at the elbow, exposing lean arms still trembling as she half-crouched in knee-deep water. She had been frantically scooping handfuls to rinse the gore from her chest and forearms pale skin now blotched pink where she'd scrubbed too hard when the beast attacked. Between them stood the warrior: taller and powerfully built, her sun-bronzed skin a rich golden-caramel tone, glistening with sweat and streaked with lighter scratches and bruises.

Her hair was a wild cascade of jet-black, thick and wavy, matted with jungle leaves, bits of vine, and dried blood, falling past her shoulders in defiant tangles. Sharp features high cheekbones, strong jaw, fierce dark eyes narrowed in unyielding focus framed a face set in grim determination, lips pressed thin. Her athletic frame, corded with muscle from days of survival, was clad in the remnants of a dark flight suit: fabric torn at the thighs and midriff, reinforced with scavenged vines, leather straps from wreckage, and strips of torn uniform binding wounds and securing the jagged metal spear in her callused grip. She moved like coiled steel boots planted wide in the sucking mud, shoulders squared, every line of her body radiating protective fury.

"Move higher!" she snarled over her shoulder, voice hoarse but commanding, as the alligator lunged again, jaws snapping with bone-cracking force. The warrior thrust her spear low, scoring a bloody line along the beast's softer pale underbelly; dark blood bloomed in the water like ink. The younger woman scrambled backward onto a sprawling kapok root, pale hands clutching vines, chest heaving beneath the grime-streaked suit, ash-blonde hair whipping as she fought for balance still half-washed, still terrified, but alive because of the shield between her and death. Jesse looked at Seren and motioned as she held the spear they had when she got the straps from the sled off.

Jesse moved as she made some noise but not enough to distract just to let her knew she was human as coming around the beast was snapping. Her hand went to the spear and the cool sensation of the water on her legs was right there... but she was move worried about poisoning a source of water they might have for the moment with a body. Jesse breathed in and then she breathed outwards with the forrce though as she felt a sharpness to her vision.. a pull to her muscle to have them ready.
 
Seren did not rush forward when the lagoon erupted. She stopped just short of the treeline, weight settling evenly through her stance as the scene resolved itself in front of her with brutal clarity. Predator. Defender. Survivor. A triangle of violence held together by seconds and nerve.

Her gaze took in everything at once, the churned water, the broken branches, the way the beast's mass displaced the lagoon like a living landslide. She felt the pressure of it through the Force, old hunger and territorial certainty, a thing that had never learned fear because nothing here had ever truly challenged it.

Jesse's motion registered immediately. Seren gave a single, almost imperceptible nod in return.

"I see it," she said quietly, her voice low enough not to carry over the water. "And you're right. We don't foul the source unless we have no other choice."

She stepped closer, boots sinking just enough into the mud to ground herself, but she did not enter the water. Instead, she reached outward, not with force meant to strike, but with pressure. Weight. Presence. The shadows beneath the canopy thickened subtly, stretching longer than the light should have allowed, pooling near the beast's flanks and tail.

"It's a drop predator," Seren continued, calm and precise. "Ambush instinct. Once it commits forward, it won't turn quickly."

Her attention flicked briefly to the warrior with the spear, assessing the timing of her movements, the way she placed herself between jaws and flesh. Then to the younger woman scrambling higher, alive because someone had chosen to stand.

"Give her space to retreat," Seren said, directing the words toward Jesse without looking away from the beast. "When it lunges again, it will overextend."

The shadows shifted again, not grabbing, not striking, but confusing depth and distance. Water rippled where nothing physical moved, reflections bending just enough to disrupt the beast's targeting.

Seren's breath slowed. Her vision sharpened.

"I won't kill it unless I must," she added evenly. "But I can make it hesitate. That's all we need."

Her eyes met Jesse's for the briefest moment, steady and intent.

"On my signal," Seren finished softly. "You move. I'll keep its attention just long enough."

The jungle seemed to hold its breath with her, shadows deepening as the ancient predator prepared to strike again.

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse gave a nod to the plan as she watched the beast and she wanted to debate the not killing part not out of bloodthirst but mostly because... thing was big, dangerous and if they wounded it to scare it off.... it might hold a grudge.... but it also might be here in a place where it had a nest which is why it was attacking. "Seren look for clues, if this is a nest it would explain the aggression, we might be able to." She broke off when it lunged at the two with spears and Jesse moved opposite, taking the shortest distance to go to the side and mostly poke with the spear to try and deter it. To drive it away as it charged through them aand went for the tree on its own momentum swishing with the tail. The other one there acknowledging Jesse before she stabbed at the tail and her companion was higher up in the tree and the roots. The blonde was going across the branches for a moment as she seemed to be muttering curses to herself more then aanything and Jesse was moving to try for the detriment.
 
Seren did not hesitate when Jesse spoke. She did not argue the point either. Her attention had already shifted, senses spreading outward even as the beast surged again.

"You're right," she answered quickly, voice calm but sharpened by urgency. "This isn't a wandering predator. It's defending something."

She moved as the creature lunged, not retreating but angling aside, boots sinking into the mud as she reached for the Force with practiced restraint. Not to strike. Not yet. Her awareness slid along the ground, through roots and water and the dense tangle of growth, searching for disturbance rather than presence.

"Watch the waterline," Seren called to Jesse as the spear glanced and the beast's momentum carried it past them. "If there's a nest, it won't be far from the shallows. Eggs need heat and cover."

She lifted one hand slightly, palm open, and the shadows beneath the canopy responded not as weapons but as veils. Darkness thickened around the lagoon's edge, not blinding, but breaking the creature's depth perception, disrupting its charge paths rather than confronting them head-on.

The beast's tail whipped, branches snapping as it turned back, hissing, frustrated rather than wounded.

"Don't corner it," Seren added, eyes never leaving the water as she tracked subtle currents and churned silt. "If it thinks it can retreat and defend, it'll choose that over pursuit."

Her gaze flicked upward briefly, confirming the blonde's position in the branches, then back to Jesse.

"Drive, don't punish," she said firmly. "If we're wrong and there's no nest, we disengage. If we're right…"

She paused as something registered beneath the surface. A cluster of warmer shapes, shielded by roots and stone.

"…then we clear space and get out," Seren finished. "This isn't a fight we win by killing. It's one we survive by leaving it nothing to defend."

She shifted again, guiding the shadows to open a darker corridor away from the lagoon, deliberately obvious to a territorial mind.

"Jesse," Seren said evenly, "left side. Push it back toward the deep trees. I'll keep its attention off the roots."

Her stance lowered, balanced and ready, patience replacing aggression as she waited for the creature to choose retreat over rage.

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse gave a nod of her head to that as she was moving now. Her nod was of acknowledgement as she was looking at the other woman who was fighting. "Retreat." She said it and motioned as the woman gave a nod and looked up. "Mari, run towards the nice lady with the candy." She said it and was moving with Jesse as the voice could be heard from above with the fleeing blonde. "I hate you, I hate you, I hate you." She was moving and Jesse ran along it as she rounded back to mostly use the trees and the massive beast followed a little... several meters but it wasn't leaving the immediate area that it had been in while she scanned for Seren.

"Keep running." She said it while she was moving up some of the jungle and into the trees but the area of the lagoon was away from them. The other two were there as Jesse climbed into the trees with the blonde, turned around and helped the other one up. Her hand on the wire and vine of the sled that had been following and going with them so it was safe. She looked down and couldn't see the beast at the moment. She sat there in the thicker branches with a nod of her head. "Hi." Jesse said it as she was there and the muscled fighter offered her a bladder that smelled but there was water in it when she drank some and it was the best thing she drank.
 
Seren did not waste time on relief until she was certain the retreat had held. Her gaze tracked the tree line where the beast had last been seen, senses stretched outward, feeling for movement rather than sound. Only when the jungle settled into its uneasy quiet did she turn her attention fully to the others.

She stepped into view beneath the canopy, calm amid the tension, one hand raised slightly so her approach was unmistakably nonthreatening.

"Good," Seren said evenly, eyes flicking from Jesse to the two women now clustered in the branches. "That was the right call. It didn't pursue because it won't abandon that water. Nest or territory, either way, we don't press it."

Her gaze settled briefly on Mari, taking in the shaking hands, the muttered curses, the adrenaline still burning through her.

"You're safe up here," Seren added, her tone grounding rather than soothing. "Breathe. Let it pass."

She accepted the offered bladder without comment, testing the scent, then took a careful drink before handing it back.

"It's not clean," she noted, "but it's usable for now. We'll boil what we can once we're set."

Her attention returned to Jesse, a quiet nod of approval following.

"You kept the sled clear and didn't contaminate the lagoon," Seren said. "That matters."

She glanced once more toward the water through the breaks in the foliage, thoughtful.

"We don't take that route again," she decided. "But now we know where the water is, and what guards it. That's still information."

Seren shifted her stance, settling in among them in the branches, unhurried but alert.

"We wait a few minutes," she continued. "Let the jungle forget us. Then we move along the higher ground and circle back toward camp."

Her eyes met Jesse's, steady and certain.

"No one was hurt. That means we did well," Seren finished quietly. "We'll survive the rest the same way. By choosing when to fight—and when not to."

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse looked at Seren and gave a nod of her head while she was looking at it and Mari was there but also the other woman who spoke. "Ginger." Jesse looked at her and then the blonde Mari who waved. "I'll be fine, I survived a crash and my brother being impaled on top of me... I can survive anything." She looked at herself. "Except outfits, this is the thirds one shredded and lost." She said it and Ginger looked at her. "I am sure the others got some more things out of the crash." She said it while looking at the area around them and Jesse gave a nod looking at her own outfit. "I don't think we have much." Mari looked at her and laughed.

"Oh no there are others, we went out while they stayed and were working on the camp. Some professor from Chandrilla said he could make a com device from parts and scraps." Mari gave a nod as Jesse looked at Seren. "We can keep track, more survivors can mean a better means of working together." She turned back to look at them. "How many of you are there?" Ginger looked at her and offered a nod. "Six, me, Mari, the professor, his wife, a crewmen from the liner and one of the tram operators." She gave a look though. as Jesse spoke. "I am Jesse Organa and this is Seren." Her hand pointed while she was going though with the sounds of the jungle returning to normal.
 
Seren took in the exchange quietly, her attention moving between faces, posture, injuries, the way the group stood together rather than apart. When Jesse introduced her, Seren inclined her head in a small, respectful nod, acknowledging each of them in turn before speaking.

"Six is a good number," she said evenly. "Enough to divide labor without stretching anyone thin, and enough eyes to notice when something changes."

Her gaze lingered briefly on Mari, then Ginger, not scrutinizing so much as assessing resilience and awareness.

"If you already have people working on shelter and communications, that gives us options," Seren continued. "Coordination matters more than strength out here. Knowing where everyone is, and what they can do, will keep small problems from becoming fatal ones."

She glanced toward the treeline, listening as the jungle settled back into its uneasy calm.

"We'll keep moving carefully," she added. "But staying in contact with the others is a priority. A working com device changes the shape of survival."

Her attention returned to the group, her voice calm and grounded.

"For now, let's regroup with the rest of your people," Seren said. "Once everyone is accounted for, we can decide what comes next together."

It was not a command, just a clear direction offered without pressure, leaving space for cooperation rather than fear.

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse gave a nod of her head to that.. they would be able to do a lot more together and Seren had a good idea for cooperation and Mari with Ginger were moving now. Circling back around as they avoided the Lagoon and found their pathway through to follow it back. Their movements easily followed for when they might need to head back with Jesse making more mental notes about the location when they came out of the jungle and onto the coastline of the island. She could see more pods and crash debris that had been dragged to form the basis of a fortification. At least a barricade and wall around the little area they had and Jesse could see others moving around who were there. Ginger turned to look at them and had a look. "Welcome to our little slice of hell, we got attacked early and made the barricade first but there is still dangers."
 
Seren took in the barricade without reacting outwardly, her attention moving over the dragged debris, the uneven lines where panic had given way to practicality, the way people moved within it. Not rushed. Not frozen either. Working.

She inclined her head to Ginger in a small, respectful acknowledgment.

"It is not hell," Seren said evenly. "It is a perimeter that held long enough for people to adapt."

Her gaze shifted briefly to the others moving inside, noting who carried tools, who watched the tree line, who lingered close to one another.

"That matters."

She stepped closer to the edge of the barricade, not crossing it yet, letting her presence be felt without imposing.

"You were attacked early, so you prioritized shelter and sightlines," she continued. "That tells me the danger was immediate, not roaming. Territorial, likely."

A glance toward the jungle they had avoided.

"Avoiding the lagoon was the right call," Seren added calmly. "Whatever struck first probably expects prey to return there."

She looked back to Ginger, then to Mari and Jesse, her tone steady, practical.

"We will not destabilize what you have built," she said. "But we can help refine it. Clear arcs of visibility. Quiet signals. Assigned watches instead of everyone watching everything."

A brief pause, then softer.

"You survived the first attack," Seren finished. "That means this place is no longer just a crash site. It is a foothold."

She met Ginger's eyes, unflinching.

"Show me where the danger came from," she said simply. "And where you sleep."

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 
Seren Gwyn Seren Gwyn

Jesse was looking around as more of it as she moved with Mari who spoke. "Sleep?" She said it but laughed a little. "We slept a little in the boat." She said it pointing to a small inflatable raft for crashes but it wouldn't do much else. The cord of it there attached to the shore and a large piece of debris as she spoke. "Once we made sure there was no blood or wounds we went out there to have some extra space." She said it and there were the others as one came out and moved over with one looking at her as he brought another few scraps of cloth. "We don't have much left for clothing or much for food." He said it but looked at Jesse and gave a nod of his head as the others were around working on things.

"They found us at the water, something is there though or always was. it might have been gone the first time we went to it." She said it while looking over the others who were in the boat asleep. The larger leafs and some emergency blankets over them for the sun. jesse was checking on parts of it before Ginger spoke though while they had a fire going and it was low enough it wouldn't burn as much. "This is not a good place to hold up, there are too many open areas and even with a fire we still had things approaching at night. We managed to find more people at least but we didn't have as many supplies on this side from what I could see but we found more submerged pods.
 
Seren listened without interrupting, her attention moving as much as her eyes did, taking in the raft, the improvised shade, the way people clustered near the fire without truly relaxing. She let the sounds of the jungle settle before she spoke, as if weighing them alongside the words she had just heard.

"That tracks," she said quietly, more an acknowledgment than a judgment. "Water draws everything. Wounded, hunting, or simply territorial. If something learned there was an easy meal once, it will be remembered."

She crouched near the fire for a moment, adjusting a piece of debris so the flame sat lower and threw less light, then straightened again, her gaze lifting toward the tree line and the open stretches beyond.

"You were right not to stay at the water," Seren continued. "Space feels safer until you realize how visible it makes you. Fire helps morale, but it also announces you to anything that watches from a distance and waits."

Her attention shifted back to the people in the raft, then to the scraps of cloth, the half-finished barricades, the exhausted rhythm of survival already setting in.

"We do not hold here," she said calmly, not harshly, but with certainty. "Not long-term. This works as a staging point, nothing more. Too open. Too many angles. Too many reasons for something to test you again."

She looked to Jesse and then to Ginger.

"We move to higher ground if it exists nearby, somewhere with natural choke points," Seren said. "Trees, rock, anything that limits approach. We strip what we can from the submerged pods, prioritize tools, containers, and anything that can be repurposed for shelter or signal. Clothing can be mended. Hunger can be managed. Repeated attacks cannot."

There was no panic in her voice, only structure.

"I will scout before nightfall," Seren added. "Quietly. If there is a defensible pocket within a reasonable distance, we relocate before dark. If not, we reinforce just enough to get through the night and move at first light."

She glanced once more toward the water, then back to the group.

"You have done well to keep people alive this long," she said, and there was no condescension in it. "Now we shift from surviving to enduring. That requires different choices."

Her posture relaxed slightly, a subtle signal meant to steady rather than command.

"No one goes alone," Seren finished. "And no one sleeps without someone else watching. We adapt, or this place will decide for us."

Jesse Organa Jesse Organa
 

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