Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private GLITTER AND VIOLENCE




Senator Velyra Vonn of Zeltros

Velyra padded toward the little galley nook without a word, bare feet silent against old freighter plating. The oversized shirt she wore hung off one shoulder now, towel still wrapped around her hair like a makeshift crown. A trace of steam still clung to her collarbones.

Her hands found purpose.

Not to pry. Not to charm. Just—move. She located the mug by memory, checked it, and gave it a proper wash with practiced care, pausing to inspect a chip near the rim like it told her something secret about its owner. She rinsed, dried it with a corner of her shirt, then began brewing the caf with far more reverence than it deserved.

One mug, she'd said.

That would do.

She leaned slightly against the counter while the machine sputtered. Let her voice break the quiet—not loudly, just enough to be heard over the hum of hyperspace and the comfort of silence.

“Tell me something,” she said, her tone light, coaxing. “Why... This line of work? Why the Outer Rim? You strike me as someone who could’ve made a name in the Core if you’d wanted.”

She smiled faintly, glanced over her shoulder toward the cockpit.

“Or maybe that was the point—not wanting it.”

The caf beeped. She poured it carefully, inhaling the aroma before turning back toward the cockpit, cradling the mug in both hands. Then—an offer.

“I promise not to hog it.” A slight lift of her brow. “We could share. Unless that breaks some sacred freighter custom.”

She returned to the cockpit slowly, the weight of hyperspace still pressing faintly in her bones. The towel still coiled in her hair had begun to sag, a single dark curl escaping near her temple. The oversized shirt was too soft for her, and yet it suited her strangely—sleeves swallowed to her wrists, hem brushing bare thighs.

Her gaze found Rheyla's again—curious, warm, but with that softened edge of sobriety beneath it now.

“And if that’s too forward, you can deflect by telling me your favorite skyport meal. But you should know—I will judge you for anything freeze-dried.”


 

The question drifted in from the galley—soft, unpressing. Just curious.

Rheyla stayed in the cockpit, legs up on the console, blaster still in her lap. She let the silence stretch as she watched the stars blur by—swirling, endless. Safe, in their way. Predictable.

"Ryloth. Wild Space," she called back at last, voice even. "Don't remember much, but got picked up by a Mandalorian clan. Vhett. Small. Tight-knit. We took the kind of work the Core pretends doesn't exist." Her tone was distant—casual, almost flippant. Not cold. Just… controlled. "Taught me how to fight. How to fly. How to survive when no one’s coming."

A long pause followed. Too long to be casual. The hum of hyperspace filled the space she didn't.

"They're gone now."
Just that. No further explanation. No names lost. No tragedy cried.
But even from where Velyra stood, the words came charred—burned down to ash, too deep to name, too raw to share. A closed door. And behind it, something that still smouldered.

She adjusted the blaster idly, as if to shift the weight of the moment.

"And the Core?" A quiet scoff. "Too many rules. Too many eyes. You start giving people expectations, they start thinking they own a piece of you." She glanced back—not toward the open doorframe, not directly—but enough that the movement betrayed awareness. Or maybe... something more.

"Out here, no one expects anything. Which suits me fine."

A beat.

"Mostly." She mumbled to herself. A faint, self-directed smile tugged at her mouth—barely there. Then gone.

"Anyway, never met a caf worth a damn in the Core. Guess I'm staying for the drinks." Rheyla didn't turn as Velyra approached—just kept her gaze on the stars outside, fingers drumming absently on the edge of the console.

"You're in luck," she said after a beat, voice dry. "Sacred freighter customs allow shared caf if the offering party isn't wearing pants."

She finally looked at Velyra then, head tilted just enough for one lekku to slide off her shoulder again. Her smirk was light, less armour, more invitation.

"Lucky you qualify, then." She reached out and accepted the mug with one hand, not quite touching Velyra's fingers but not avoiding them either. Then, without ceremony, she took a sip—grimaced slightly.

"...Not terrible," she admitted. "Might just earn your co-pilot stripes yet."

Rheyla leaned back in the pilot’s chair, boot tapping lightly against the console frame. The caf mug rested between them now, balanced on a crate she’d dragged closer—neutral ground. Her gaze flicked toward the blue tunnel of hyperspace, then back to Velyra.

Then, a sideways glance. "So."

A pause. "What’s a prim, polished, Zeltros-born senator doing on a gutterworld like Naraka?" She didn’t say it unkindly. If anything, her tone was with a light tease—too light, like she was poking at the edge of something real without making it obvious.

"Secret lover? Fleeing a political rival who's also your ex? Midlife crisis?" A faint smirk tugged at one corner of her mouth—not mocking, just curious, like she was honestly trying to picture it. Her lekku shifted as she tilted her head, the motion lazy, thoughtful.
Rheyla didn’t even know how old the senator was—Zeltrons were impossible to pin down that way—so the midlife crisis line was more tease than theory.

"Or let me guess… you're secretly part of some undercover operation to destabilise caf prices in the Outer Rim."

 
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Senator Velyra Vonn of Zeltros

She rose just slightly to shift her weight, letting the hem of Rheyla’s oversized shirt swish loosely around her thighs with a deliberate sashay. Not overdone, just enough to remind the room that she still knew exactly what she was doing.

“Then I suppose I’ll have to stay pantsless for morale,” she murmured, gaze flicking toward the copilot’s seat with theatrical innocence.
“Customs are customs, after all.”

The corners of her lips turned upward—but just for a moment.

“A secret lover?” Her brows lifted theatrically. “Stars, don’t tempt me. I’ve already got twelve husbands and sixteen wives. Give or take a handful of divorce hearings.”

She sipped the caf and gave a wry little shrug. A practiced motion, almost elegant in its resignation. Exaggeration? Maybe. Maybe not.

“One more scandal and I’ll need to start sending apologies in bulk. I hear Mon Cala prints them on biodegradable scented Vellum these days.”

She glanced at Rheyla sidelong, studying the play of light against cheekbone and blaster alike.

"Maybe I just like good caf and dangerous women,” she said finally, a glint of dry affection in her voice.
“I’ve made worse decisions.”

She let that hang in the air a moment before reclining slightly, one knee curling beneath her.

“I was on my way back from a summit,” she said after a pause—less performative now. The truth. “Anti-corruption efforts across the Mid Rim—shared audits, civilian oversight councils, post-reconstruction accountability…” She trailed off, then tilted her head faintly, smirking. “You know. The kind of things that make very wealthy, very guilty people nervous.”

Her tone turned more clipped—sharper, but still poised.

“Stopped to refuel on the way back. I was... I was teasing the pilot right before the first explosion.”

She voice clipped short again. The weight of it sank into the quiet between them—like carbon smoke still clinging to skin no matter how hard you scrubbed.


 

Rheyla let out a low whistle.

“Twelve husbands, sixteen wives, and still found time to crash-land near my ship. Busy calendar.”

She swirled the caf in the mug, watching it catch the light. “You politicians really are overachievers.”

A beat passed. Her gaze lingered on Velyra—not quite soft, but not her usual armour either. Something between amusement and scrutiny. Rheyla huffed a low laugh into her caf. “Wealthy, very guilty people nervous…” She tilted her head slightly, a smirk tugging at her lips. “I’d pay to see that.”

A beat. Her eyes didn’t leave the stars.

“Hell, I’ve done worse for free.”

The smile lingered—crooked. Not quite bragging. More like memory.

She holstered her blaster, then added with dry amusement, “There’s a certain sector Moff still nursing a bruised ego and a missing prisoner. Word is, he’s got a bounty out—unofficial, of course. No paperwork. Just credits and a grudge.” She glanced sideways, the curve of her mouth sharp as a vibroblade. “Apparently, leaving a man stranded on a prison moon messes with his career trajectory.”

Then she shrugged like it was nothing. Like she hadn’t just admitted to humiliating Imperial brass and painting a target on her back.

“Anyway. Some people just don’t take losing well.”

The hum of hyperspace filled the gap again. Rheyla didn’t rush to fill it.

She took another sip of caf before handing the cup to Velyra.

A wry smirk followed.

“Anyway. My vote’s on 'dangerous women and bad life choices.' You’ve got good taste, at least.”

She leaned her head back, one lekku draping over the side of the chair, eyes flicking to the side with a lopsided grin.

“Dangerous women and bad life choices,” she echoed.

“Guess that puts us both on-brand. Maybe our meeting was fated, Senator Velyra Vonn of Zeltros,” Rheyla teased, her eyes settling on the woman beside her—bathed in the dim glow of hyperspace, where shadows traced the slope of her cheek and the glint of chartreuse eyes watched the stars like they meant something. The oversized shirt draped artfully off one shoulder, all silk and sin against the control seat’s hard lines. A smile tugged at Rheyla’s mouth—curious, crooked—before she finally looked away.

Her gaze landed on a weathered deck of cards.

Reaching into the side panel, she pulled out a worn Pazaak deck—cards bound by a fraying strap, corners curled with use. The kind of deck that had seen too many cantinas, too many high-stakes holds, and maybe one or two blaster-scorched tables.

“Tell you what,” she said, holding it up between two fingers. “We’ve got a long jump and half a pot of mediocre caf.”

Her grin curved slow and sharp.

“You know how to play Pazaak, Miss Lady Senator? Feel like tempting fate…?” She teased her again.

 
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Senator Velyra Vonn of Zeltros

By the time the nav timer dipped below five minutes, Velyra had lost three rounds of Pazaak, won two, and surrendered one with the kind of flourish that suggested a dramatic bluff—even if it wasn’t.

They’d shared the rest of the caf. Exchanged small stories, lightly worn. The kind that didn’t press, didn’t dig. Just enough to feel less alone.

And somewhere in between sarcastic wagers the air between them had shifted more. Not completely. Not permanently.
But enough for the Zeltron to breathe a little easier.

Now, perched in front of a small reflective panel mounted above the freighter’s sink, Velyra tapped a bit of tinted balm across her cheekbones with her ring finger, blending it in with practiced ease. The result wasn’t flawless—but then, perfection was for speeches. This was for armor.

A little color. A little shape. Just enough to add insult to injury when they see me not only alive but thriving.

And in the company of someone with grit cast in their very bones. If she does get recognized, a public appearance like this would still play in her favor.
She dragged the edge of a stylus casing across her upper lid, just sharp enough to mimic liner. It worked—barely. Good enough for improvised caf-grounds as pigment. Not a lot of emergency beauty supply stations in hyperspace.

“Never underestimate the power of recycled cosmetics,” she murmured to her reflection, then turned slightly, brushing a loose curl behind her ear. Her hands lingered there for a beat—then dropped.

Paint the face. Square the shoulders. Let them see what you want them to see.

She unzipped the borrowed jacket another inch. Not enough to reveal burns in her newly laundered top, just enough to hint at the assets underneath it.

Perfect.

The ship gave a familiar lurch beneath her feet—a soft tremble through the floor that warned of reversion to realspace.
Velyra exhaled once. Calm, composed.

Then stepped lightly from the mirror and made her way forward, ready to follow Rheyla by the elbow – such a formal posture wasn't too intimidating for the dangerous Twi'lek.

“Showtime.”


 

Rheyla didn’t primp.

She didn’t own dresses. Didn’t paint her face. Didn’t hover in front of reflective panels wondering what the galaxy would see. The idea alone made her vaguely itch. She understood the value of appearance—how a certain tilt of the head or cut of fabric could disarm, distract, and control a room without saying a word. She’d watched others weaponise beauty like a vibroblade. And she'd be lying if she said it didn't work. If it didn’t look good.

But that game had never been hers.

She leaned against the wall just outside her own quarters, arms folded across her chest, one boot braced against the bulkhead. Waiting.

It was still strange—having someone else in her space. Her bunk. Her fresher. The galley already felt less like hers with two mugs in the rack. She’d given permission. Freely. Reflexively, even.

And she hadn’t retracted it. Wouldn’t. But stars, it itched.

She didn't know why she'd said yes. Not really.

Maybe it was the caf. Perhaps it was the Pazaak. Or maybe it was the way the Senator had smiled like she knew the punchline to a joke Rheyla hadn’t even realised she was telling.

The ship shuddered as it exited hyperspace—a soft groan of worn stabilisers kicking back into realspace. Rheyla didn’t move.

Outside the viewport, Teysha Minor glittered like a lie told with confidence: a jewel-cut little pleasure moon wrapped in silver rings and atmospheric shimmer. Up close, the spires of crystalline architecture rose like spun sugar from velvet valleys, all designed to impress.

Rheyla snorted to herself.

Somewhere down there, they probably did serve symphony liquor in ice goblets. Somewhere down there, someone probably would call her star-blessed with a straight face. She could already hear herself trying not to punch them.

The cockpit argument with landing control had been brief, gruff, and just rude enough to secure a pad. No names given. No titles claimed. Just a transponder ping and a refusal to pay a guest registration fee.

They landed anyway.

Now, as footsteps padded softly up the corridor, Rheyla tilted her head toward the sound without fully turning.

“You done making caf into cosmetics in there?” she called with a dry tease. “Or should I prep a gift basket for the spa?” No real bite behind the words—just that crooked edge of sarcasm she always wore when unsure what to do with herself.

Still not looking, she added: “Welcome to Teysha Minor. Hope you’re ready to be called ‘star-blessed’ by a man in decorative gloves.”

And maybe—just maybe—her mouth curved into something that could be mistaken for a smile.

The click of approaching steps echoed down the corridor.

Rheyla didn’t straighten, didn’t shift her weight. She just exhaled slowly through her nose and let her arms stay folded, one boot still pressed against the bulkhead wall. When Velyra appeared, she caught her first with peripheral instinct—then turned, just slightly.

And yeah.
She looked.

The jacket—hers—hung open just enough to hint. Not enough to flash. Just enough to suggest that whatever had been scorched beneath it had been covered in something cleaner, tighter, and criminally well-fitted. The curls were tucked, the cheekbones sharpened with something subtle, and the glint in Velyra’s chartreuse eyes had returned full force.

“...Huh,” Rheyla muttered, mostly to herself. Her eyes captivated Velyra a second longer than normal.

No other comment. No compliment. Just a flick of the brow, the almost-smile that said she’d noticed and chose not to elaborate.

She pushed off the wall with a slow, casual roll of her shoulders and reached to key the hatch release. The ramp hissed, then began to lower—metal groaning into the high-humidity air of Teysha Minor. The scent hit first: syrup-sweet florals and some kind of expensive atmospheric filtration, probably designed to smell like nothing at all except wealth.

Rheyla made a face. “Smells like a perfumed bank vault.” She almost regretted it, almost.

She started down the ramp with that easy, loping gait of hers—half-glide, half-threat. She didn’t look back to see if Velyra was following. Just spoke as she walked:

“Okay, ground rules: I don’t pay cover. I don’t wear collars. And if anyone asks, I’m your disgruntled bodyguard—fired halfway through the night, stuck around for the drinks… and maybe the company.”

A beat.

Then, with a glance over her shoulder—dry smirk, voice low and amused:

“Unless you’ve got a better story, Red.”

The breeze caught her lekku as she stepped off the ramp—night wind warm with planetlight shimmer, the kind that didn’t come cheap. Ahead, the landing pad glowed with subtle underlights, polished to a mirror’s sheen. Past it, a shuttle bay offered sleek passage into the entertainment district proper—tiered balconies, translucent crystal walkways, faint music drifting down like perfume.

It was too clean. Too polished.

Too Teysha.

Rheyla hated it already.

They didn’t make it five steps before the guards arrived.

Three of them, in charcoal armour trimmed with tasteful silver, already moving the second the landing struts hissed. No weapons drawn, but hands hovered near holsters—casual stances with trained weight behind them. Their helmets were smooth, unreadable. The lead one tilted his head just slightly, sizing her up like a burn mark on marble.

Above, security drones swept past with soft, chiming tones—elegant little whispers that said: you don’t belong here.

Her ship creaked behind her like an insult in steel.

Rheyla didn’t reach for her blaster.

Yet.

She just stopped—boots solid on the spotless pad, shoulders loose. Let the silence hang a second. Then muttered under her breath, just loud enough for Red to hear:

“Let me guess,” she muttered under her breath, just loud enough for Red to hear. “The decor doesn’t scream ‘fire hazard,’ but I do.”

But when she glanced back—just for a moment—and saw Velyra Vonn beside her, composed and radiant, somehow turning borrowed clothes and caf-pigment into political weaponry…

She almost didn’t mind.

 

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