Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private integrity that remains

The hangar smelled of lubricant and scorched metal, but Rynar barely noticed. His attention was entirely on the ship before him. The AEG-77 Vigo they'd purchased for 75,000 credits sat under the dim hangar lights. unarmed, unassuming, and yet full of potential. He took a measured step forward, boots echoing softly, and let his eyes trace every panel, seam, and weld. Nothing in its shape screamed catastrophic failure, but that didn't mean it was safe. Not yet.

Dean's excitement buzzed beside him, but Rynar ignored it, crouching near the hull to activate a portable datapad. Lines of text scrolled rapidly across the screen as he pulled up the ship's repair logs, maintenance history, and flight records. Every note, every patch, every previous warning flickered across the display.

"Hmm…" he muttered, finger tracing a few older entries. Some minor power fluctuations, a few recalibrations to the nav-computer, but nothing that indicated structural instability. Still, he frowned. "Previous owner patched a coolant leak in the aft section… did a decent job, but I'll want to check it myself before we move her."
Cupcake padded to his side, tail flicking, eyes bright and alert. Rynar's gaze softened slightly as he crouched lower, letting the nexu inspect the hull along with him. She'll fly safely… if I make sure of it.


He tapped the datapad, cross-referencing repair logs with system diagnostics. Life support, environmental controls, engine calibrations, sublight thrusters, everything responded within tolerances. A few minor recalibrations were needed, but nothing beyond what he could handle. Still, he ran a final sweep, protective instincts flaring. Not just for himself, but for Dean and Cupcake. No detail would escape him.


Rynar stood slowly, eyes narrowing as he studied the ship in the hangar light. "Spaceworthy, yes… but she's going to need my attention before any real runs. I'll make sure it's safe for all of us, no surprises in flight." He looked toward Dean, letting a rare smirk curl the corner of his mouth. "Ready to see her up close?"


Every movement, every glance, every step around the ship carried the weight of a man who survived far too many battles to trust luck. This wasn't just a ship. it was a new safe zone, a base of operations, and he would guard it with the same meticulous care he gave anything that mattered.

Deanez Deanez
 
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Dean watched him move with a quiet kind of attention she did not bother to hide.

She did not crowd him or interrupt the rhythm he fell into as he circled the hull, crouched to inspect seams, cross-referenced logs, and let instinct guide his hands as much as data. The hangar smelled of oil and scorched durasteel, but to her it also smelled like transition. Like the moment just before something stopped being theoretical and became real.

She felt the pull of excitement, sharp and almost unfamiliar, but she kept it contained. Rynar did not need enthusiasm in this moment. He needed space to make the ship honest.

Dean stepped closer only when he straightened, her boots quiet against the deck. She glanced at the datapad he still held, reading without asking, eyes moving quickly through the diagnostics with the practiced ease of someone who had lived inside systems for most of her life.

"Aft coolant patches are common on ships this age," she said calmly. "Especially ones that were flown hard but maintained just well enough to stay profitable. If it held through hyperspace stress cycles, it will hold long enough for us to reinforce it properly."

Her gaze lifted to the hull again, tracing the same lines he had. Where he saw risk and responsibility, she saw structure and possibility.

"I am not worried about surprises," Dean continued, quieter now. "Not because they do not exist, but because you look for them before they get the chance to matter."

Cupcake brushing the hull drew the faintest softening in her expression. She watched the nexu test the ship, the only way she knew how, scent and instinct, and found something grounding in that simple approval.

"This does not feel like a mistake," Dean said after a moment. Not a declaration, not blind optimism. Assessment. "It feels like something we can shape."

She turned her attention back to him, the corner of her mouth lifting just slightly at his smirk.

"I am ready," she answered evenly. "Not just to see her up close. To learn her. To understand what she needs and what she can give us back."

She stepped closer to the ramp, hand brushing lightly along the hull as she passed, the contact deliberate and reverent without being sentimental.

"We will take the time she asks for," Dean added. "Reinforce what needs reinforcing. Replace what is tired. Build redundancies where they matter most."

Her eyes met his again, steady and certain.

"This is not an escape," she said. "It is infrastructure. And I trust us to maintain it."

She waited then, beside him, ready to step aboard when he was, already treating the ship not as a purchase, but as a shared responsibility they were choosing to grow into together.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar followed Dean up the ramp and into the corridor, boots clicking softly against the floor. The smell of oil and metal mingled with something faintly antiseptic, cleaned, maintained, ready to be made their own. Cupcake, true to form, darted past them, tail flicking as she disappeared down the hallway.

Rynar shook his head, letting out a quiet laugh. "Always in a hurry," he muttered under his breath, eyes scanning the narrow corridor. He moved deliberately, fingers brushing panels and railings, checking for wear or hidden issues, each step careful to ensure the ship remained safe for him, Dean, and Cupcake.


A doorway to starboard caught his eye. He approached and swung the hatch open. The interior revealed itself: six compact berths lined neatly along the walls, storage compartments tucked beneath each bed, and a small common area in the center. The quarters were tight but functional, clearly intended to accommodate a full crew or, in their case, a small, efficient team.

Rynar crouched to inspect a few of the storage latches, gently tugging at each one. Everything clicked into place cleanly. No signs of structural fatigue. He straightened, eyes glinting with a quiet approval. "Not bad," he muttered, voice low, almost to himself. "Enough room for six… or fewer if we want extra storage. Functional. Comfortable enough for extended runs."

He let a hand brush along the wall beside him, as if testing it, then glanced back at Dean. "This'll work. We can make it ours. Reinforce where it needs reinforcement, add redundancies. Cupcake won't eat the bedding… I think." A smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth.


With a final sweep of the quarters, Rynar moved toward the next hatch, gesturing for Dean to follow. "Let's see what the rest of you has to offer."

Deanez Deanez
 
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Dean did not hesitate.

As he turned from the quarters and gestured her forward, she closed the last step of distance between them and let her hand slip into his. The contact was quiet and deliberate, fingers fitting easily against his palm, not anchoring him, not steering him, simply there. She walked with him rather than behind him, matching his pace as if it had always been that way.

Her gaze moved through the space the way his did, but where he cataloged stress points and tolerances, she measured flow, how bodies would pass one another, where light pooled, where silence might settle when it was needed.

"Six bunks is generous," Dean said calmly, thumb brushing once against the back of his hand as they stood in the doorway. "More than we need." She glanced back toward the berths, then to the storage beneath them. "Two will do. The rest can serve as storage space, tools, and spare parts. Things that keep us moving without clutter."

Her eyes followed a faint scratch along the floor where Cupcake had already passed, and the corner of her mouth softened.

"And she will need her own place," Dean added, already considering it as a given rather than a question. "Something reinforced. Low profile. Warm. Somewhere she can stretch without being in the way." A pause. "A real bed. Not a corner."

She squeezed his hand once, subtle but sure.

"We are not outfitting this like a troop carrier," she continued. "We are outfitting it like a home that can survive being tested." Her gaze lifted to meet his, steady and unflinching. "That means space for rest as much as readiness."

As they moved on, her grip remained easy, unhurried, fingers still laced with his as they walked deeper into the ship together.

"We do not need excess," Dean said quietly. "We need intention."

And with that, she followed him through the next hatch, already thinking in terms of shared routines, quiet hours, and a ship that knew who belonged inside it.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar pushed open the next hatch, stepping into the room beyond. The space was clean, empty, and almost unremarkable, just four bare walls, a small viewport, and a floor scuffed only by maintenance crews long gone. It smelled faintly of detergent and recycled air, untouched since the ship's last full overhaul.

He paused, letting Dean's hand stay in his for a moment longer before releasing it to step inside. Fingers brushed along the walls and the floor, testing for weak spots, flex, anything that might betray a hidden flaw. Finding none, he straightened, letting a low hum of satisfaction escape him.

"Clean slate," he muttered, a corner of his mouth lifting in a rare smile. "No damage. No hidden surprises. Plenty of options." His gaze swept the space, already cataloging possibilities. This could be a workshop… a study… a kitchen… somewhere to tinker without leaving tools in the corridor.

He turned to Dean, voice low but firm. "I agree. This won't be a troop carrier. We don't need rows of beds or bare-bones functionality. This… this can be a place to live, to survive… and to build what we need to keep moving."

Cupcake had followed silently, sniffing at the corners, tail swishing as she inspected the space in her own way. Rynar crouched briefly, reaching a hand toward her without touching, letting her scent map the area first. When she gave a single approving chirrup, he allowed himself a soft laugh.

"Let's think… workroom? Armory? Kitchen? Or maybe a mix," he said, stepping to the center and letting his gaze roam. "Whatever we decide, it stays practical. Functional. Safe. Everything has a place, and every place serves a purpose."

He glanced back at Dean, letting the words hang in the air. "We make this ship ours. Not a barracks. Not a transport. A home that works as hard as we do—and survives everything this galaxy throws at us."


With that, he began pacing slowly, circling the empty room, considering layouts, storage, access, and utility panels, already imagining the quiet rhythm of life within these walls. Dean working beside him, Cupcake lounging somewhere safe, and the ship itself finally becoming more than metal and circuits: a place to belong.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean stood just inside the threshold for a moment, letting him take the space first. She watched the way his attention moved, methodical and careful, not possessive but protective, as if the room were already something entrusted to him rather than claimed. When Cupcake chirruped her approval, Dean's gaze softened in a way that had nothing to do with schematics or threat matrices.

She stepped fully into the room then, boots quiet against the deck, and turned slowly, taking in the empty walls, the viewport, the honest lack of history. Her hands folded behind her back out of habit, posture composed, but there was a different quality to her stillness now. Not assessment alone. Intention.

"A clean slate is rare," Dean said calmly. "Most spaces come with ghosts. This one doesn't." She moved closer to the viewport, resting her fingertips lightly against the frame as if anchoring the thought. "That makes it valuable."

She looked back at him, meeting his gaze without urgency.

"If we try to make this room do only one thing, it will fail us," she continued. "This ship is already large enough to demand flexibility. This space should reflect that." Her eyes traced the floor, then the walls, already mapping invisible divisions. "Work surfaces that can fold away. Storage that locks down for acceleration. A cooking station that can be shut off and sealed when needed. An armory that does not dominate the room, but exists as a quiet certainty."

Her attention shifted briefly to Cupcake, now circling the room with proprietary interest.

"And a place where she can be here without being underfoot," Dean added. "Somewhere she can rest and still watch the room. She will feel safer if she can see us."

She moved closer to Rynar, stopping at his side rather than in front of him, aligning instead of confronting. The proximity was deliberate, familiar now.

"This doesn't need to be perfect on the first pass," Dean said quietly. "It needs to be adaptable. A room that can change with us as our needs change." A pause. "That is how something becomes livable instead of merely efficient."

Her gaze lingered on him for a moment longer than necessary.

"You are right," she said. "This ship should work as hard as we do." The faintest hint of warmth touched her voice. "But it should also be allowed to be quiet when we are."

She looked back around the room one last time, already seeing it filled not with equipment alone, but with routine, shared work, the low rhythm of a life being built rather than defended.

"Let's start here," Dean finished. "And do it properly."

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar's hand found hers before he realized he had reached for it, fingers curling around hers with surprising ease. For a moment, he simply stood like that, letting the reality of the empty room, and everything it promised, sink in.

A small, disbelieving laugh escaped him, low and almost boyish, the kind of sound he rarely allowed himself. "We… really own this," he murmured, voice barely above the hum of the ship's life support. The words felt strange and weightless at once. A ship. Ours. Together.


Before he could think better of it, he twirled her gently, careful not to let go, letting Dean's laugh echo through the room as their feet shifted across the clean floor. Cupcake paused mid-step, tail flicking in amusement or maybe judgment before continuing her inspection with renewed vigor.

Rynar's grin lingered, wide and unguarded, as if he could hardly believe it. "I've wanted a ship for a long time," he admitted, voice quieter now, tinged with awe. "But I don't think I've ever… wanted to share one like this."


His eyes met hers, steady and bright, the corner of his mouth still tugged into that rare, open smile. "We'll make it ours. Every corner, every panel. We'll survive, we'll build, we'll..." He shook his head slightly, laughing softly again. "...we'll live in it."


And in that small, empty room, surrounded by bare walls and possibilities, Rynar let himself feel the start of something new, a life, a home, a future with Dean and Cupcake, quiet but real.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean let herself be turned without resisting, the motion light and unforced, her balance adjusting on instinct rather than thought. The sound that left her was soft and surprised, not laughter she had planned, but the kind that slipped out when a moment caught her unprepared. When he steadied her again, she did not immediately pull her hand free.

For a heartbeat, she looked at him.

There was something disarming in the openness on his face, in the way the room had stripped him of caution without taking anything vital from him. She had seen him composed under pressure, meticulous in danger, steady in pain. This was different. This was a relief, finding somewhere safe to land.

"Yes," Dean said quietly. "We do."

The words were simple, but she spoke them with care, as if acknowledging a truth that needed to be handled gently. Her thumb brushed once against his knuckles, grounding, deliberate.

"I've spent most of my life moving through spaces that were never meant to be kept," she continued, her voice calm but no longer distant. "Temporary Rooms. Ships that were tools. Places you passed through quickly because attachment made you careless." She glanced around the empty walls, the clean lines, the waiting silence. "This is the first time I've stood somewhere and felt permission to stay."

Her gaze returned to him, steady and clear.

"Sharing it changes the equation," Dean said. "It means every decision matters differently. Not just how we escape, but how we wake up. How we rest. How we leave things behind at the end of the day." A pause, thoughtful rather than uncertain. "I am… willing to learn that."

She did not mirror his grin, but there was warmth in her expression now, unmistakable and real.

"We will make it ours," she agreed. "Carefully. Intentionally. With room for mistakes and revisions." Her eyes flicked briefly to Cupcake, now sprawled as if she had already claimed the space. "And with allowances for chaos."

Dean squeezed his hand once, then let it go, not withdrawing, just releasing the moment so it could breathe.

"This ship doesn't have to prove anything," she said softly. "Neither do we." She met his eyes again, conviction steadying her voice. "We just have to live here honestly."

And for the first time in a very long while, the future did not feel like a plan to be survived. It felt like something she could step into without armor.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar was quiet for a long moment after she finished.
Not because he didn't know what to say but because he wanted to say it right.

His grip loosened where her hand had been, not from distance, but from restraint, like he was afraid of pressing too hard on something newly real. He exhaled slowly, a breath he hadn't realized he'd been holding, and the smile on his face softened into something smaller. More vulnerable.
"Sorry," he said quietly, the word earnest rather than embarrassed. "If I seem… giddy."
He glanced around the room once more. the bare walls, the clean floor, the absence of ghosts then back to her.

"It's just…" His voice lowered, steadied. "I haven't been this close to something that felt like a real home since the day I buried my parents." Not said for sympathy. Just truth. "After that, everything was temporary. Safe enough to sleep. Never safe enough to stay."
He swallowed once, then gave a faint, self-aware huff of a laugh. "So yes. I'm a little unbalanced by it."
His gaze held hers, unflinching, trusting her with the weight of the admission. "But I'm not reckless. I promise. I know what this means... sharing it. Choosing it. Letting it matter."

Cupcake shifted behind them, stretching out with a low, contented sound, already treating the room like it had always belonged to them. Rynar glanced back at her, then returned his attention to Dean.
"I like the idea of waking up somewhere we chose," he said. "Of building routines instead of exits. Of having a place that doesn't ask us to be ready to run every second."


He reached for Dean's hand again. slower this time, giving her the space to accept it rather than assuming. When his fingers closed around hers, it was steady, grounded.
"We'll do this carefully," he agreed. "And honestly." A faint smile returned, quieter now but no less real. "And if I get excited sometimes… it's because this is the first time in a long while that something feels like it's being built instead of endured."

He squeezed her hand once, gentle and sure.
"Thank you," he added softly. "For choosing to stay."

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean did not pull her hand away.

When he reached for her again, slower and careful, she let her fingers lace with his and then stepped closer, closing the space he had deliberately left open. The movement was quiet and certain, not impulsive, not dramatic. She rested her other hand at his side, just beneath his shoulder, anchoring herself to the steady warmth of him before allowing the contact to become something more.

She drew him into an embrace.

It was not tight. It did not try to contain him or shield him from anything. It was simply present, her forehead brushing lightly against his temple, her breath steady as she allowed herself the rare luxury of staying still with another person. She felt the tension ease in him, felt the way his weight settled rather than braced, and she held him there long enough for it to matter.

"You are allowed to feel joy," Dean said softly, her voice close to him now, unguarded in a way she reserved for very few. "You are allowed to be moved by this. Being human does not make you reckless. It makes you honest."

She eased back just enough to see his face, one hand still resting against him, her thumb brushing once along his knuckles in the same grounding motion she had used so many times before. There was something gentler in her expression now, something openly affectionate without abandoning the composure that was simply part of who she was.

"I feel it too," she admitted quietly. "I simply show it differently."

Then she leaned in and pressed a light kiss to his lips. It was brief and intentional, not claiming, not hesitant, a simple acknowledgment of what they had chosen and what they were beginning to build. When she drew back, she did not step away.

Her gaze held his, steady and warm.

"This place does not need ghosts," Dean said. "And it does not need exits mapped into every corner." She glanced once around the empty room, the bare walls, the quiet promise of it, then returned her attention to him. "Welcome home," she said softly.

And she stayed right there, arms still around him, accepting his joy without asking him to diminish it, choosing him as he was, exactly where he stood.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar lingered a heartbeat longer in the empty quarters, letting the quiet settle around him, the faint hum of the ship's life support a steady pulse beneath his awareness. When he finally pulled back, he gave her hand a soft squeeze before releasing it, letting her move freely.

"You can explore the ship," he said, voice calm but carrying that subtle edge of care he always had for them both. "Cupcake can lead the way if she wants."


Dean gave a faint nod, curiosity already flickering across her features, while the nexu, tail flicking, padded ahead, sniffing at the walls and nooks like she owned every inch of it. Rynar allowed himself a small, private smile at that cupcake's approval, in her way, always meant the ship was safe.

He turned toward the next hatch, running his gloved fingers along the frame, noting wear patterns and the faint traces of previous maintenance crews. "I'm going to check the engine room," he murmured, almost to himself. "I want to see if any of the previous owner's patches need attention. Nothing major, I hope, but it's better to be thorough."

The hatch swung open smoothly, revealing the narrow corridor beyond. He stepped in, boots clicking lightly against the metal deck, scanning every surface for stress marks, loose panels, or signs of improper repair. Every corner, every access panel, told a story: the subtle discoloration of a replaced coolant pipe, the faint sheen of fresh welding compound over a previous breach, the slight misalignment of a control conduit that had been patched in a hurry.

His fingers trailed over these areas, tracing the history of the ship's past maintenance. Nothing alarming, but a few tweaks would be needed to ensure the integrity of the systems. He made mental notes, engine calibration, coolant valve check, power distribution reroute. anything that could prevent a sudden failure. Every adjustment he imagined had one goal: keep Dean and Cupcake safe.


Even as his mind cataloged repairs and potential improvements, a thread of warmth ran through him. That shared moment in the quarters, the acknowledgement of this place as home, wasn't lost. It made the meticulous checks feel less like chore and more like a promise. Every patch he verified, every conduit he inspected, was a safeguard, not just for the ship, but for the life they were beginning to build aboard it.

He paused at the threshold of the main engine compartment, peering through the hatch. The thrusters were solid, the conduits clean, but his eyes lingered on a section of tubing with a faint discoloration near a junction. A minor patch, easily reinforced, but he cataloged it all the same. Cupcake's chirruping in the corridor reminded him again why these details mattered.

"Alright," he muttered quietly, voice almost swallowed by the hum of the engines. "Nothing catastrophic… but a few things to tidy. We'll make her ours, completely."
With one last sweep of the compartment, he began opening access panels, testing valves and conduits, mentally mapping where tools and spares would sit once they started fitting out the ship. Even as he worked, the memory of Dean's hand in his lingered a reminder that this wasn't just a ship; it was their home. And for the first time in a long while, he allowed himself to feel the weight of that, fully, without armor.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean let him go without comment.

Not because she was indifferent, but because she understood the shape of what he was doing. When Rynar turned toward the engine room, it was not withdrawal. It was care expressed through motion, through inspection and preparation, through making sure the ground beneath them would hold. She watched him disappear through the hatch for a second longer than necessary, then shifted her attention forward.

"Come on," she murmured, not as an order, but an invitation.

Cupcake did not need encouragement. The nexu moved ahead with easy confidence, tail flicking as she claimed corridors by scent and sound, pausing only to peer into open compartments before continuing. Dean followed at an unhurried pace, one hand trailing lightly along the bulkheads, registering the ship the way she always did. Not emotionally at first, but structurally. Lines of sight. Access points. The rhythm of the deck beneath her boots.

The med bay was the first space she stopped in.

It was compact but intact. A single diagnostic bed, wall-mounted scanners, sealed cabinets still stocked with outdated but serviceable supplies. Dean moved through it methodically, opening drawers, checking seals, making mental notes of what would need replacing and what could be supplemented. It would do. More than do. It could become something reliable with time and care.

She pictured Rynar here without effort. The way he would sit too still when injured. The way Cupcake would hover nearby, watchful and impatient. The thought tightened something warm in her chest, unfamiliar and not unwelcome.

"Good bones," she said quietly, mostly to herself.

They moved on.

A small galley came next. Functional, understated. Space for real food if someone bothered to cook instead of rationing. Dean paused there longer, leaning against the counter as Cupcake jumped up onto a bench, sniffing curiously before flopping down with a satisfied huff. She allowed herself a small smile at that. Approval, apparently, extended to the galley as well.

She keyed open a storage locker and found a sealed pack of dried meat left behind by the previous owner. Not ideal, but usable. She tore off a small strip and held it out without ceremony.

Cupcake accepted it delicately, tail flicking in unmistakable contentment.

"Settling in already," Dean observed softly.

The sound of distant tools and shifting panels carried faintly through the ship. Rynar, at work. Exactly where he said he would be.

She followed the sound eventually, stopping just short of the engine room threshold so she would not interrupt him mid-task. From where she stood, she could see the set of his shoulders, the way he moved with careful certainty, hands steady as he worked through access panels and diagnostics. There was a comfort in that sight she did not bother to analyze.

Instead, she leaned against the bulkhead and spoke just loudly enough to carry.

"Med bay's intact," Dean said calmly. "Galley's workable. Cupcake has already decided where she'll nap."

A pause, then, gentler.

"I'll make a list of supplies once you're done down there. No rush."

She stayed there, watching him work, listening to the hum of the engines and the quieter hum beneath that. The sense of something being built, not hurried, not forced, but chosen.

For someone who had spent her life preparing for departure, Dean found herself doing something new. She waited.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar's shoulders flexed as he leaned deeper into the main access compartment, elbows brushing metal panels, tools clutched in gloved hands. The hum of the engines vibrated faintly through the deck beneath him, steady and predictable, but his attention was on the intricate weave of wiring snaking through the bay. Every line, every junction told a story if you knew how to read it.


A glint caught his eye beneath a secondary conduit. Fingers probing, he carefully pried the panel back further and found it: a small, angular device clipped to one of the primary comms wires.


"Haar'kase cuy'val," he muttered under his breath, cursing softly in Mando'a as he worked to dislodge it. The device gave a small click as it came free, and he held it up, examining the tiny engravings and the faint residual energy signature.


A tracker. Or maybe a restraining bolt repurposed to monitor ship systems. Whoever had used this Vigo before hadn't intended it to be just a ship, they had wanted eyes, ears, and control. His eyes narrowed. A ship this clean, this well-maintained… but carrying remnants of Black Sun syndicate tech. That explained a lot: the patched conduits, the careful calibrations, the unassuming exterior meant to avoid suspicion.


He gave the device a sharp twist and tossed it onto a nearby surface. The panel hissed back into place as he double-checked connections, then leaned back, shoulders relaxing. "Well," he murmured, half to himself, half to the ship, "we're officially off the radar."


Satisfied with the inspection, he wiped a smear of grease from his glove and began walking back toward the corridor where Dean was waiting. A small, mischievous smirk tugged at his lips. "So… now that we're completely untrackable, I suppose I could-"


And then his forehead met the edge of an open maintenance panel with a solid thunk.
"Haar'kase!" he barked in Mando'a, rubbing the spot, cheeks tinting just slightly. Cupcake chirruped in what sounded suspiciously like judgment.

Rynar straightened, shaking his head with a half-laugh, hands lifted in mock surrender. "Apparently, I'm better at finding syndicate trackers than making witty remarks." He smirked, finally reaching her side, slightly embarrassed but still steady. "At least the ship is safe. You can thank me for that… eventually."


He glanced down at Cupcake, who had already decided the moment was acceptable and returned to sniffing the floor. Then, his gaze went back to Dean. "All clear. Fully ours. No surprises. Just… us."

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean had heard the change in the engine's hum before she saw him move.

It was subtle, the way a system sounded when something foreign had been removed, a quiet settling back into itself. She straightened slightly from where she'd been leaning, attention sharpening even before his voice carried down the corridor. When he emerged, grease-smudged and faintly triumphant, she took in the device he'd tossed aside, the relaxed line of his shoulders, the unmistakable shift in his posture that said the ship had just become truly theirs.

Then came the thunk.

Her breath caught despite herself, hand lifting halfway on instinct before she stopped when he straightened again, muttering curses and rubbing his forehead. The corners of her mouth twitched, control held for exactly half a second longer than usual.

"Careful," she said dryly as she stepped closer. "I'd prefer our first injury aboard not involve you losing an argument with a bulkhead."

She reached up without asking, fingers gentle but certain as she brushed his hand aside to inspect the spot he'd hit. The touch was light, practiced, the same steadiness she used in a med bay, but there was warmth in it now that had nothing to do with procedure.

"You're fine," Dean concluded quietly. "Bruised pride at most."

Her gaze flicked past him to the discarded device, expression sharpening for a moment. "Black Sun," she said, not surprised, just confirming. "That explains the cleanliness. And the silence." She looked back at him. "Good catch. I wouldn't have liked finding that after launch."

When he said just us, something in her softened fully.

She stepped in then, closing the last bit of distance he'd left, arms sliding around him again in an embrace that was unhurried and sure, not clinging. Not cautious. Simply present. Her forehead rested briefly against his shoulder, the hum of the engines steady beneath them.

"Thank you," she said quietly. Not for the tracker alone. For all of it.

She pulled back just enough to look at him, thumb brushing once over his knuckles where grease still lingered. "Ship's clear. Cupcake's claimed half the corridor. And you," a faint, fond curve touched her mouth, "are officially banned from celebrating near open panels."

Then, softer, anchored.

"All clear," Dean echoed. "Fully ours."

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar let out a low chuckle, the vibration of it running through his chest as he held her close. "Noted," he said, voice calm but with that faint edge of mischief. "Banned from open-panel celebrations. Enforcement is… mandatory."


Before Dean could reply or protest, he bent at the knees just slightly, fingers sliding under her legs and across her back, and lifted her effortlessly over his shoulder like a sack of grain.


"Hey!" Dean called, half startled, half laughing, the sound carried through the corridor. "I... Rynar! Put me down!"

Rynar's grin widened, one of those rare, unguarded expressions that let a bit of the kid in him show through the otherwise controlled exterior. "Not until we reach the bridge," he replied smoothly, keeping his stride even and careful. Each step measured, deliberate. He didn't want a repeat of the panel incident. "You'll see the view from the top. And I get to remind you whose ship this is."


Cupcake trailed behind, tail flicking in amusement or judgment, depending on how one interpreted nexu expressions, padding lightly along the deck. She occasionally darted ahead to inspect a hatch or sniff at a panel, then trotted back to follow their path, clearly approving of Rynar's methodical care.

Dean squirmed just slightly in his grasp, arms folding across his chest instinctively, but she didn't flail or resist. She trusted him, knew the firm steadiness of his movements, and the rare warmth in his hold made her own laughter slip free despite herself.

"You really are ridiculous sometimes," she said, voice teasing. "And clumsy."
"Haar'kase," he replied with a shake of his head, his smirk unshaken. "Better clumsy than off the radar. We'll be fine."


He adjusted her slightly over his shoulder, careful not to press her awkwardly against the panels, then continued toward the bridge. The hum of the engines beneath them, the faint vibration through the deck, the soft scent of durasteel and grease, all of it felt like home now, their home.

When they reached the bridge, Rynar set her down gently, letting her feet touch the deck first. He lingered close, brushing an errant strand of hair from her face, still keeping that subtle warmth pressing in like a tether.

"Fully ours," he said quietly, the words heavier than before, carrying all the weight of their work, their care, and the life they were beginning to build here.

Dean looked around the bridge, the controls gleaming faintly in the overhead lights, Cupcake already stretching along the console edge like she had claimed it first. She met Rynar's gaze, the corners of her mouth curving softly. "We'll make it ours," she said, tone sure and gentle. "Every corner, every panel, every day."


Rynar's smirk returned, this one quieter, warmer, edged with contentment rather than mischief. "Then let's start from the top," he murmured, hand brushing hers as they began to move along the consoles together, eyes scanning controls and readouts. "From the bridge down, every inch."

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean let herself steady after he set her down, boots finding the deck with practiced ease even as her pulse took a second longer to follow. She glanced back at him, one brow lifting in a way that would have passed for stern anywhere else and read as fond here.

"Enforcement may be mandatory," she said calmly, smoothing her jacket back into place, "but the terms are negotiable." There was a pause, just long enough for the corner of her mouth to betray her. "Especially when the arresting officer abuses their authority."

She turned then, taking in the bridge properly. The forward viewport framed a sweep of sky and distant terrain that felt impossibly open after corridors and cells and careful exits. The consoles were older but honest, their glow steady, their layout designed for hands that knew where they were going. This was not a place built for panic. It was a place built for decisions.

Cupcake stretched across the console like a queen claiming a throne, tail flicking once in lazy satisfaction. Dean huffed a quiet breath. "Of course, she chose the command position."

She stepped forward, resting her hands lightly on the edge of the navigation console, feeling the faint vibration of the ship beneath her palms. The Vigo responded to touch, not demanding attention, simply existing, solid and present. She could work with that. She could build with it.

When she looked back at Rynar, her expression had settled into something composed but warm, the kind of calm that came from certainty rather than control. "From the bridge down," she agreed. "But we do it together. No disappearing into engine bays without telling me. No carrying me off without warning." A beat. "At least not when there are witnesses."

She reached for his hand again, fingers lacing with his in a way that felt natural now, unremarkable in the best sense. "This ship isn't yours or mine," Dean said quietly. "It's ours. Which means we make decisions the same way we got here. Deliberately. With care. And with room to breathe."

Her gaze flicked back to the viewport, then returned to him. "We start here," she finished, voice steady and certain. "And we build outward. Not just a vessel. A life that doesn't require running."

She squeezed his hand once, grounded and sure.

"Welcome to the bridge," Dean added softly. "Captain…on a trial basis."

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar's lips curved into a faint, sly smirk at her words, the subtle humor tugging at the corners of his otherwise controlled expression. Her "witness" comment had landed just right, teasing, careful, aware of the moment and he let himself enjoy it. "Ah," he said, voice low, deliberate, carrying a hint of amusement, "so the threat of witnesses keeps me in line… noted."

He shifted closer, gloved fingers brushing lightly against a console edge, casual and incidental, yet deliberate enough to let her feel the warmth of him near. "Though," he added, the mischief in his tone growing more pronounced, "if you insist on policing me, I might need your… assistance later." The words were light, teasing, but the suggestion was unmistakable. "Armor maintenance. System calibration. Someone has to keep me… in top form."

His gaze flicked toward her, just enough to gauge her reaction, the corner of his mouth quirking into a knowing grin. "I suspect you'd be very… thorough."


He leaned back slightly, as if giving her the space to respond, though the tension in the room, warm, charged, playful, made it clear the offer wasn't entirely casual. Cupcake, apparently taking her role as silent observer seriously, stretched along the console, tail flicking as if in approval of the subtle tension.

Rynar let the moment linger, savoring the rare ease of teasing without immediate consequence. He tapped a panel lightly, the mechanical sound punctuating his words, and added, "Careful, though. I might start expecting this level of attention for all ship maintenance. You'd set a standard I'd be hard-pressed to meet."


A quiet chuckle escaped him, self-contained, almost private, and he allowed himself a fraction of unguarded enjoyment. "Still," he continued, voice softening as he gestured toward the forward viewport, "bridge secured. Crew... mostly cooperative. Cupcake approves. Now… let's see what the ship can really do."

He moved toward the consoles, hands sliding across the controls with measured confidence, scanning readouts, toggling switches, noting minor calibrations that might need adjustment. All the while, he kept one hand just lightly near hers, not touching unless she moved closer, letting the silent connection linger even as he focused on diagnostics.

A small, almost imperceptible smirk returned to his expression. "You know," he said softly, without turning, "if I let you take over some of these systems, I could call it a partnership. Full cooperation. You'd get hands-on experience with everything, and I'd… be in safe hands."

Rynar paused, letting the words hang, letting the unspoken layers of teasing and care float between them. Then he returned to the readouts, fingers dancing across panels with precise, confident motions, the hum of the engines beneath them grounding the moment. Even in play, he remained meticulous, protective, entirely himself.


"Bridge secure," he muttered under his breath, a faint note of satisfaction in the statement. "Systems nominal. Crew accounted for. And," he added with a subtle grin, glancing at her just enough for her to catch it, "temperaments manageable. For now."

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean did not look away from the console at first. She let his words settle, let the tone land, let the warmth of his proximity register without reacting too quickly. Her fingers moved with practiced ease across the display, scrolling through diagnostics and power distribution as if nothing at all had shifted in the air between them.

Only then did she glance sideways at him.

"Careful," she said calmly, voice level and composed, but with an unmistakable undercurrent now. "If you start framing discipline as an invitation, you may find I take you at your word." One brow lifted slightly, not a challenge, not a retreat. Consideration. "And I am very thorough."

She stepped closer, close enough that her shoulder brushed his arm as she leaned in to review the same readout, her attention apparently fixed on shield harmonics and sensor latency. Her presence was deliberate, her posture relaxed, the kind of confidence that did not need to announce itself.

"But," Dean continued, her tone cooling just a fraction, not to diminish the moment but to shape it, "there is an order to things." She tapped the screen lightly, locking in a calibration sequence. "We finish accounting for the ship. We make sure every system is honest, every redundancy tested, every risk mapped."

Her gaze lifted to meet his then, steady and unguarded.

"After that," she added quietly, the faintest curve touching her mouth, "we can discuss how… cooperative you intend to be."

Cupcake flicked her tail, unimpressed but attentive.

Dean straightened, hands folding loosely behind her back as she took in the bridge once more. "Partnership," she said, acknowledging his word. "Shared responsibility. Shared decisions." A beat. "And shared discretion."

She moved past him toward the forward viewport, pausing just long enough to let her fingers brush his hand, brief and intentional, before withdrawing again.

"For now," Dean finished, voice even, composed, unmistakably interested, "we stay focused. The ship comes first."

Then, without looking back, she added, softly enough that it was only for him:

"And once she's settled…We'll see how deep your confidence really runs."

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 
Rynar's answer came far too fast.
"Deal."
The word was out before his brain caught up to his mouth, crisp and immediate and the moment it landed, he froze. Just for a heartbeat. His shoulders stiffened, ears warming under his hair, and he very deliberately cleared his throat, the sound a little rougher than intended.


"…I mean"
Another pause. He exhaled through his nose, regrouping like a man forcibly yanking himself back onto solid ground.


"...conditional deal," he amended, straightening and planting his hands on the edge of the console as if the ship itself required his full, undivided attention. "Pending, uh. Ship readiness. Obviously."

He did not look at her for a second or two longer than strictly necessary.
When he finally did, there was a sheepish edge to his expression now, the earlier confidence having tripped over its own feet and faceplanted into sincerity. One corner of his mouth twitched, half a grin he didn't quite trust himself with.


"You play dirty," he added, not accusing, more impressed. "Strategic timing. I respect it."
He shifted his weight, rolling his shoulders once, visibly refocusing as he leaned closer to the console she'd been working on, eyes scanning the readouts with renewed seriousness.


"Alright," he said, businesslike again, though the warmth hadn't fully left his voice. "Before I embarrass myself further... how's the system software looking?" He gestured to the diagnostics she'd pulled up. "Any ghost protocols? Black Sun liked burying subroutines in navigation and comms. things that only wake up when you jump or transmit."

A beat, then quieter, more grounded.

"I want to know this ship listens to us before we ask it to do anything important."


He glanced back at her then, expression steady again, but not closed off, something open and honest behind it.
"…We've got time," he added. "No rush. I just want to make sure the foundation's solid... For everything."
Cupcake flicked her tail again from the command seat, clearly approving of the return to order... even if Rynar's ears were still just a little red.

Deanez Deanez
 
Dean did not miss the speed of his answer. She also did not react to it as he might have expected.

She kept her attention on the console, fingers moving with smooth, economical precision as she expanded the diagnostic tree. Still, there was a subtle shift in her posture, a loosening at the shoulders, as if something about his unguarded response had settled comfortably rather than disrupted her balance.

"Conditional deals are the only kind worth making," she said evenly, eyes tracking lines of code as they scrolled past. Her tone was composed and professional, yet not cold. There was warmth in it now, restrained and intentional. "They leave room for reality."

She leaned slightly closer to the display he had indicated, bringing up layered subroutines and sandboxed partitions, her presence close without pressing. "So far, the software looks clean," Dean continued. "Primary nav core is original manufacturer architecture. No third-party wrappers. No delayed execution flags tied to hyperspace transition or long-range comm bursts."

Her fingers paused briefly, then tapped twice, isolating a faintly glowing branch. "There was an old diagnostic listener buried in the secondary comm buffer," she added. "Inactive. Probably legacy Black Sun monitoring, but it was dormant and poorly hidden. I've quarantined it and burned the access key. It will not wake up again."

She glanced at him then, just long enough to meet his eyes.

"You were right to ask," Dean said quietly. "This ship needs to answer to us before it answers to physics."

She straightened, folding her arms loosely as the system finalized its checks, the bridge lights dimming and then stabilizing as the Vigo accepted the updated authority hierarchy. "No ghosts. No hidden loyalties. She listens now."

A beat.

"And," she added, softer, not teasing but not neutral either, "you recovered well."

Her gaze returned to the viewport, to the stars waiting beyond the hangar shields. "We do this in order. We do it right. There is no rush." A pause. "That applies to everything."

She let the silence sit, not awkward, not charged enough to distract, simply present.

"Next step," Dean said calmly. "Reactor load simulation. I want to see how she behaves under stress before we ask anything more of her."

Her hand hovered near the controls, close enough to his that if either of them moved an inch, they would touch again.

"When you're ready," she finished.

Rynar Solde Rynar Solde
 

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