Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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It's Very Cold & Dark In Space

Gone are the songs of a lost little girl, the sultry words of a fellow scoundrel, the scolding words of a witch or the silent and angry cleaning of dishes by a jedi. Instead, silence fills the air where chatter and laughter reigned supreme.

The Knight's Helm sails eerily quiet through space. What once was, is no more. Her many crew members now down to one. Its bulkheads once filled with laughter, songs, and the occasional yelling match now sit silent, only echoing the low hum of the ships engines. A stack of dishes sit in the galley, clean as they may be, they sit there; not put away, as if they have no place to go.

The Helm flys from system to system, planet to planet, port to port. There is little rhyme and even less reason to her routes these days. No cargo is being moved, no goods being exchanged. She makes her rounds, collects her data, and moves on with no purpose, no reason; like a ship with no compass, no sail... no star to steer her by.

Far from the cockpit - where most ship's captains would spend their time - perched over a console surrounded by monitors, scanners, viewing screens and communication devices sits a single figure. He sips on a hot drink, the steam rising from it providing a little warmth to what is a cold, empty ship... a cold, empty man.

His fingers tap the console in front of him, while his eyes glance over data, shifting from one monitor to the other, at a rate faster than most human's would care to read. His eyes are glazed and a bit weary; too much staring into a monitor these days. A lone system piques his interest, as a scan reveals a lack of communication or activity. Further analysis shows an entire planet has nearly gone dark, with little communication or data being moved on or off planet.

Curious, he thinks to himself, as records show that months ago this wasn’t the case. While it was no Coruscant, it did receive enough communication and space traffic to register in his system in the past; yet this time, it was completely dark. Patches turned his sensor array towards the cloud of darkness, trying to see what was going on. Static was all that was returned, complete silence, as if the whole planet and system was dead.

A frown found itself upon his face, as he took a drink of his now cool café. A few keystrokes on his datapad turned up even less… no ship traffic, no communiques, nothing, he mused to himself, slightly perplexed. A few more key strokes on the console, and he was hacked into the government system… an eerily quiet government system. A larger search shows that only a handful of files have been made recently on an entire planet.

Even more troubling, as Patches tries to access those files, they are corrupted. The frown on his face grows.


Tap tap tap. Tap taptaptap. Tap.
Searching…… Searching…...Matches: 1.
File deleted. Reconstruction possible. Reconstruct or Full Delete? R/D
Tap.
Reconstructing File: Personal Journal
Tap tap tap.
Searching…… Searching….. 19 entries after specified date. Open first entry? Y/N
Tap.
Opening entry. Audio and Visual available. A/V/B
Tap.
Opening with Audio and Visual. Stand by.



- First Salvageable Entry -


The video opens on a small room. The only light in the room is from the glow of the screen, making details in the background difficult to make out. The only thing visible with any clarity is the pale face of a human female. Short, dark hair lies flat and limp, plastered to her face. Dark circles rim startlingly hazel eyes. There is a pallor to her gaunt flesh, as though she has lost a lot of weight in a short period of time. She leans forward, gaze casting about for a moment, clearly checking to see if the recording has started yet.

“Everyone’s de-” she stops, her voice crumbling as her face drops, a sob wracking her slender body , one hand coming out to shut down the video. A high pitched keening. Black.

-End Transmission-




Dead? he asked, uncertain if he wanted to know the answer, or continue viewing. He may have stumbled onto something far above his paygrade, and while this information could prove valuable, it could also prove very dangerous. Still, Patches had never been one to head warnings, so he continued, pulling up the next salvageable file.

A quick search of the database turns up three other files with the same date stamp, all timed to after this one. Interesting that it took her four tries. He wasn’t sure if he expected more or less.




-Next Entry-

Everyone’s dead,” she says, her tone even, if a touch raspy. Eyes dry.

I don’t have a clear recollection of the last few days, but based on what the system is telling me, it’s been five days since the last person checked in. I’ve been either unconscious or delirious with fever for those five days.” She pauses, glancing around the room for a moment as she collects her thoughts.

What happened isn’t clear yet. I am running gels to see what shows up. What I do know is that it is some kind of pathogen. It has a fatality rate of at least 98%. It causes a high fever and,” she stops, breathing deeply as she closes her eyes. Without opening them, she keeps talking, but her voice is strained. “Pain. Incredible pain. I believe that most of the people in the hospital died of the fever. I have to. The alternative is….” her voice trails off and she doubles over. It takes several minutes, the video running the entire time, before she rallies.

I have not been able to do an examination of the bodies. I’ve only been lucid enough to start documentation today, and just this is more than I might be able to manage,” she finally continues, her voice strained and stiff. “I will attempt an autopsy after I rest again, and find something to eat. I have sent out a call, but no one is answering. Either the hospital is under Heightened Quarantine, and simply no one is answering until they have something to tell me. Or.

She stops, struggling. “I will continue to record my findings as I have them,” she resumed, her voice stiff and tight. Reaching out, she touched the screen.

Darkness.

-End Transmission-

What little warmth he could find left in his communications room had escaped. A slow exhale escaped his lips, as he leaned back in the chair, running his fingers through his hair, letting the gravity sink in of what he had discovered. A silent planet indead; a dead one, as matter-of-fact.

He'd no doubt stumbled across the fragmented journal entry of one of it's last people, before they too had met their end. He searched his archives, and yet no record appeared of this event. It wasn't well known or widely reported as of yet, and if someone knew about it, they weren't talking about it at this point.



Tap tap tap.

Retrieving personnel records. Run facial recognition? Y/N

Tap.

That would take a few minutes. It would take a few minutes for his system to sync up with an old journal system halfway across the galaxy. Still though, given her initial reports on the virus, he wasn't in any rush to close that distance. No, it may be very cold in space, but sometimes it's very safe.




-Next entry-


Same room. Same woman. The lights were on now, however, offering a better view of what turns out to be a medical lab bay. White and silver dominate. She looks even worse in the bright light.

Whatever caused this is viral,” she says without preamble. “The bacterial, fungal and amoebal tests all came back negative, but the shell viral gels tested positive for cytopathic effects in the culture samples.

She speaks like a professor, explaining something matter-of-factly to a room of students. Or as an official coroner making a report. It's all a bit over Patches head, but he had watched his fair share of holo medical dramas, and thanks in large part to one of his favourites - Bothan ER - he did grasp some of what she was saying.

CPE was confirmed by cytoplasmic inclusion bodies present in the samples. These could be either an accumulation of virus replication byproducts or altered host cell organelles," and that's where she completely lost him, "I will need more time to study it. They include very few host protein markers, so the computer should be able to isolate them once I spin down the samples. While this could also be indicative of a genetic disease, I consider that incredibly unlikely compared to a virus. The presentation of fever and the speed this moved through the population of the hospital excludes an unknown genetic anomaly. The coincidence would be astronomical. The virus seems to induce lysis, or a breaking down of the cell membrane, in infected cells. The exact mechanism is unknown at this time.” Pausing for a moment as though to collect her thoughts, she continues, a little quieter. “Death seems to be caused by hemolysis, massive internal bleeding, as the virus completely ruptures the blood cells throughout the body. Bleeding to death, but with no singular location for the bleed, which seems to have circumvented any possibility of clotting. The red blood cells simply fall apart, flooding the plasma with cytoplasm.” She looks down at her hands. In the bright light, it is clear that her hands, wrists and the lower part of her neck are covered extensively in dark, ugly bruises.

This was visible as a halo in the…. blood samples taken post mortem.” She pauses, breathing in deeply, slipping her hands back into her lap. “This is a typical presentation for certain families of bacteria, but not usually a viral indicator. I expect to find certain variation in future autopsies. Both done so far have been on patients who were unhealthy at the time of the event. I will try next on one of the staff.

She stops, swallowing. An uncomfortable amount of time passes before she reaches out suddenly, turning off the video.


-End of Transmission-
Patches never pretended to be any medical expert - well, except for that one time on Thyferra - but it didn't take one to know none of that sounded very appealing, nor pleasant. The weary expression on the mystery women's face said it all. She was tired, exhausted, and probably nearing the end, soon to join her fellow planet mates.

A few more entries come in, scrambled, full of medical jargon Patches struggles to comprehend, as he has to search for many of the terms definitions. She remains weary, yet is calculated in her findings. They show a surprisingly calm energy, considering all that is going on around her, her end clearly just around the corner.

His console continues to scan local files for a match, as he pulls up another entry.

-Next Transmission-



Same woman, different room. This one is immediately recognizable as a control room. The passage of the months is clear as she stands over the console, hovering rather than sitting. Her hair had grown to shoulder length. There are still (new?) bruises visible on her forearms and the base of her neck, but they are faded, harder to see if one didn’t already know to look. It is obvious that she has gained back only a little of the weight she has lost. She shifts, barely containing nervous energy. When she speaks, her voice is low and urgent, none of the controlled professionalism of the first entries.

I don’t have time to do the final tests. This might be my only chance to make this work.” She pauses, licking her lips nervously. A quick glance over her shoulder, she reaches over, hitting a series of commands on a console just out of sight of the video.

I don’t know why I’m even recording this,” she says softly, turning back to look at the screen. She frowns. “I’m going to wipe these records before I go. So recording this is less than pointless. I can’t risk them knowing I was here. That I survived. Maybe they already know. But if they did, they would have done…. something…. by now, yes? If they know, they know. But I won’t leave this here to tip them off if they don’t already.

She leans in, her face filling the screen. “I do know why I’m recording this,” she whispers. “Even if I’m going to destroy it in three minutes. Recording it makes it real. I will get away from here. And I will discover who is responsible.

She stops, drawing back. “I’m going to get away from here,” she repeats, her tone hard, hazel eyes glittering. “And I am going to destroy whoever did this to my people, to my planet. They are going to die a slow, painful death. Or a quick painful one. I’m not picky,” she practically growls, teeth visible as her lips pull back. “I will not give up justice for vengeance. I owe them that. This recording is my promise. I will find them.” Breathing in raggedly, she smiles, but there is nothing pleasant in it.

And I will end them.


-End Transmission-

He leaned back in his chair, rubbing his chin. She's... alive? He checked the time stamp on the last entry, only a few weeks old. Had she made it? he wondered to himself. His console interrupted him before the full weight of this discovery could sink in, notifying him that a match had been found.

He pulled up the file that the computer had found. Yes, this was she. Short, dark hair. Hazel eyes. Healthy and smiling. At least ten kilos heavier. No pallor or bruising. Just enough to give the system a challenge it would seem.

Irajah Ven.

It meant ‘fearless’ in an ancient tongue. Fitting.

He read the rest of her file. Her family history. It was all going to matter, if he was going to find her. Her clan, family, previous life, they were dead to her now. He recognized the crucible she had been through. And he didn't doubt that she had survived getting off of the planet. Not after surviving all of that, to die in any other way? No.

Irajah. Good.

A deep breath fell from his lungs, as he contemplated his next move. Sell the information? Too dangerous, he mused to himself. It was clear this virus didn't happen naturally, and without knowing how it got there or by whom, he didn't need it ending up in the Knight's ventilation system.

He did need to find out more though... he did need to track this woman down, and find out what she had learned in the weeks since her last entry.

'Course you know what that means, don't you mate? the voice of Deagan Hunt asked Patches in his head. You need her, said the voice, reaffirming what Patches already knew but wasn't exactly thrilled.

If he was going to track down this Irajah, given what Patches knew, he wouldn't exactly be wanting a face to face meeting with her. He was going to have to track her down, and probably put her in an isolated room. While Patches might have lots of experience tracking people down, the whole capturing people alive wasn't exactly his forte; he was much more familiar with avoiding said fate.

His head lowered for a moment, scratching the top of it with nervous fingers, seeing little to no alternative to what had to be done next. A deep inhale, followed by a slow exhale let the moment pass, as he mustered up the courage to what needed to be done next. A few taps of his console, and an encoded message requesting to speak was sent to the Nightscowl, where no doubt one bounty hunter would be.

One [member="Skye Mertaal"] to be exact.

A few long moments passed, as he didn't expect an immediate response, before he keyed up the next entry for and sat back, listening to Irajah Ven's voice explain more about the virus, and how she had survived. He just hoped some of that inner strength and willpower would find him, and help him survive the storm that was coming his way.
 
Seven Days After Viral Event

The same medical lab bay. In the background, on one of the tables, is clearly a body, covered in a sheet. No details can be seen, but it was not there in a previous recording.

"It was easier to isolate the virus in my own body than in the computer system," she says as she sits down after turning on the recording. "But doing that doesn't help me figure out what it is. The limits of the computer system are pretty, well, limited. And I'm not really a computer person. Whatever it is doesn't match perfectly anything in our database."
​She sighs, running a hand raggedly over her face. The bruises on her wrists are vivid and angry, and each movement is clearly painful for her.

"But does that mean it's something completely new? Or something mutated just enough from the base that the computer can't extrapolate? I don't know yet. If I want to know that, I'm going to have to go through the data base myself and compare them, slide by slide. That kind of comparison will take months, maybe years of work. I don't know if I have that kind of time."

​Her tone isn't defeated. Just tired.

"I'm still hoping someone will respond to my calls. It's only been a couple days. Even if there is a 99%-" she stopped, swallows hard. It takes her a couple of seconds to gather her thoughts again. "There must be someone else out there. I realize that I have an edge thanks to dad. But. Dad at least has the same edge. And there may be others who were resistant for other reasons. This isn't a good sample of the population. Seventy percent of the people in this building were sick when the virus hit. It's not a fair sampling."

Who is she trying to convince? There is no one there but herself.
​Leaning back in her chair she seems to come to a decision.

"Tomorrow I'll leave the hospital and see what I can find. No more waiting. There must be other survivors. I'll find them if I can. The search for the virus can wait."

Fourteen Days After Viral Event

"Everyone's dead."

She'd said that already, two weeks ago. But the way she says it now rings of utter certainty and conviction. And the numbness of complete despair.

"I spent seven days," she says quietly, numbly, "Looking. All I found were corpses. I went home."

She reaches over, turning off the recording suddenly.

Fifteen Days After Viral Event

"The virus has a 100% casualty rating," she says quietly, no trace of emotion in her voice. She's in shock, or has simply shut down. Not uncommon in experiences like these.

"My situation is unique. I am not immune to the virus. I am putting this information here so that someone may find it and perhaps be able to use it to combat an outbreak like this in the future. It seems the only responsible thing to do."

She speaks calmly, concisely. She has obviously practiced what she is going to say here before recording it.

"I am Force Sensitive, though largely untrained. I chose the path of medicine, rather than the path of the Jedi. But when I was a child, my father taught me a technique to help ease the suffering of others. I don't know it's name, but it allows me to use the force to contain the virus within my own body. When the damage the virus does in one organ gets too great, I move it somewhere else and use the force to repair the damage done. It's a constant process, requiring constant vigilance. I can sleep of course, but were I to cease paying attention to it for more than, I estimate three days, the virus would kill me and infect others. The timeframe is only theoretical of course. But based on the timeframe of how the disease works, it seems to be a good guess, with a reasonable margin of error of up to a day. So let's say two days would be the greatest length of time to risk."

She breathes in deeply, letting it out in a long, low whoosh. Raising her arms, she shows the hollows of her wrists, of her elbows, where deep, livid bruises seem to constantly be renewing themselves.

"Despite this ability, it is not without draw backs. I have never had to use this on myself before. I hope that with time I will get better at it. I suspect that I am missing small internal bleeds each time I move the virus around my body. Not in my major organs, but in the routes along the way. I don't have the training in the Force to fix them. But other than some pain and bruising, it doesn't seem to be causing any serious side effects. I believe I can survive the presence of the virus in my system. Perhaps indefinitely."

Looking down, she is silent. The silence stretches on for a long time. Long enough that it seems she may have fallen asleep. Until she speaks again, very softly.

"But eventually I will die. And when that happens, I will infect whatever world I am on. And that would be a heinous misuse of the skills of a doctor. I think. So. I don't intend to do that to another planet. It's a very simple thing to avoid." She looks up at the screen, her eyes wet. "I am leaving this here, so someone, someday, might find it, and keep this from happening again. My name was Irajah Ven. I was a Doctor. And my world was destroyed. I hope you find who did it."

Slowly, hesitantly, she reaches over, turning off the screen.

The fact that [member="Jonathon Patches"] had seen another entry, dated almost five months from this one, and that there are more entries after this, are the proof he needs that she did not, indeed, commit suicide as she intended. But clearly, that was at this time at least, her intentions. Something must have changed.
 
tumblr_n2xd8s8Ckl1rhlv47o3_r1_500.gif

C O N C O R D * D A W N

Outer Rim
Mandalorian Clans Territory


Beep, beep, beep!

It was the incessant beeping that drew the Hunter from her slumber.

Her heart ricocheted to her throat, bringing the sleeping woman to life with a start, brows drawn into tight dark slashes under the heavy weight of her hair. A scrunch of her nose turned into a grimace, annoyance rapidly growing across her face.

Beep, beep, beep!

"Nek take it," she grumbled under her breath, half awake as a spare hand rubbed her face. It wasn't a warning alarm, so she wasn't being targeted. No, it was a far more unrelenting noise. The comm.

Few knew this direct line; less than a handful to be exact. Ember had been one. Deagan another. Tris and Tahira. Out of those four two were dead, one was enjoying her life, and the other was doing what he did best -- blockade run. With another groan, the brunette rolled into a sitting position.

Beep! Beep! Beep!

"Feth." she got to her feet, half stumbling before she crossed the few feet that separated her full bunk to the small data terminal. Mertaal sat down, white tank top clinging to a well-toned torso that displayed slashes of new scars here and there. Bounty hunting had its pros and its cons. Broken bones, contusions, and lacerations were some. Tip top shape was another.

A few taps of the keys and the holographic screen brought the caller up. What, or more aptly, who she saw staring back at her shocked the last vestiges of slumber away. Hair a little shaggier, face a bit more angular. He had enough of a five o'clock shadow to tell her that he either didn't care or just had other priorities.

And those same bright blue eyes...

"Jonathon?" Mertaal said his name, out loud, for the first time in months. A slip from the shock. She gave a small cant of her head to the right, her face forming a faint scowl. One that quickly faded as her expression turned stoic. Steely gray eyes met those of the Information broker. The surprise could only linger for so long.

"Been a while..."

[member="Irajah Ven"] [member="Jonathon Patches"]
 
As Patches studied the playback of further journal entries, sending out tracer signals along the way and trying to collect any record or trace of this [member="Irajah Ven"] since her supposed escape from a doomed planet, one of the viewers in his top right flickered to life, as one [member="Skye Mertaal"] - a little to his surprise - answered his holo communique. A quick swipe to the left brought her image up on the main viewer, as Patches got a good long look at one of his crew - nay, former it appeared - for the first time in a long while.

Her expression was steely, hard, and did not appear all that impressed. The use of his full name an indication that she was either surprised, impartial or angry... or quite possibly all of the above. Patches was a bit unsure himself. Happy to see her - though incapable of voicing such an opinion - and that she was alive and doing well, or at least it appeared that way. Though the fresh contusions and marks did not go unnoticed.

A few moments passed, before Patches voice finally found some words. "Miss Mertaal" he said with a nod, followed by a pause as if trying to find more words, "Is this a bad time?" he asked.

It's good to see you...
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"]


Miss Mertaal.

Skye's mouth involuntarily twitched at that. It was a familiar form of address as it was strange. The tone he'd used to deliver it was not congenial, facetious, or mocking. He wasn't showing off that rakish grin nor offering a provocative quip. No banter to exchange.

So that's how it was? Alright.

That wasn't even including the fact that he had specifically chosen to call her by that honorific and that surname.

Truth be told, she should have expected it, but it stung just the same. Not in the way one would expect, but more in the way he'd spoken it like some line of demarcation. Another form of distance. But he'd always preferred it that way. One never knew if they were interacting with the man behind the mask, or the mask in front of the man.

A bad time? Her jaw tensed, a muscle twitching in her cheek. Six months without a word a bad time? Really? It took some restraint to keep from saying that aloud. She was mad. Mad at him. Or more aptly, mad at herself. It had dawned on her a long while ago that she clearly missed him more than he missed her.

"No." she breathed out, hand brushing the thick mass of her hair away from her face. "It's as good as any."

Lids fell only to rise and she took a deep breath. Sucking on her tongue, Mertaal skimmed the flat end over her teeth. A forefinger slowly tapped a faint beat upon the desk.

"So what occasions a comm?"
 
At the time of the final entry log, planetary records as reviewed by a lone working satellite had recorded a ship lifting off from the surface. It was the first ship to lift off of the planet in five months, and the last one since that time, several weeks ago. It took no imagination to know that his quarry had been on that small vessel.

As [member="Skye Mertaal"] and [member="Jonathon Patches"] spoke, the computer correlated the jump coordinates. Ruling out several unlikely possibilities, in truth, there seemed to be only one place she could have gone from here, had she stayed on the hyperspace jump she'd exited this system from.

Tatooine.

But would she have stayed there?

The system continued to reconstruct additional journal entries from their scrambled, deleted state. His system was made for just this purpose. While it took time, it was inevitable that each one would be reconstructed in full.
 
[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Irajah Ven"]


Isn't this the part where you say, "not that to see you ain't..." and trail off.

Maybe a compliment? Mention that I look really fine?

Oh, it's awkward... it's awkward... he quietly thought to himself, aware of what was being said, but most importantly, what was not being said by the steely bounty hunter. She may have not had any daggers on her, but he couldn't help but feel like they were being aimed at him through her eyes.

errr... eye? Too soon for jokes, he thought to himself. If people only knew how many good jokes he had stifled over the years, and kept to himself... material practically writes itself sometimes. However, his inner musings, as entertaining though they may be to him at least, was getting him nowhere.

"I ummm," he paused for a moment, as if collecting his thoughts, "we're having some problems with the locals, and I thought maybe..." his voice trailed off. What a minute, what locals? You are in space you nerf-herder!

And who is "we're". There is no we. There is no one... you're all alone.

He shook his head, clearing his thoughts of that inaccurate, random tangent, as he corrected himself, "Sorry, I ugh... don't know where that came from," he said shrugging.

"I do require your expertise though," he said, more focused and serious than his previous statements may have portrayed.
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

Problems with the locals? What locals? It wasn't like she could ask how he's been or where he's been at. He was at the Helm at least that she could gather from the background. It was his data terminal room. She'd spent plenty of time there searching for information on targets when she first began hunting to get them credits to survive.

And what was it about this 'We're'? Did he already find another crew? Annoyance grew again, at least until he clarified what he meant. Or didn't mean? She narrowed her eye, observing faint details from the Information Broker's mannerisms and tone. She might be hyped up in her Force Suppression pills, but something was off...

"My expertise?" she repeated slowly, finger tapping a faster beat on the data terminal console. There were very few instances Jonathon Patches had ever asked for her help. Usually, it was the other way around.

"You mean a Hunter."

Is that really all you have to say, Jon?
 
Twenty Days After Viral Event

She doesn't look any better than she did the last time she recorded. If anything, she looks worse. But she is alive, and that counts for something. But there is something there that wasn't before. There's a certain animation in her eyes, a certain fire. It's the same fire burning in the very last recording. It hadn't been there before.

"I found it. I don't think I've slept more than an hour or two at a time in the last five days, but I found it."

She shifts uncomfortably, pulling a series of files on the screen in front of her, overlaying the images over her face in the recording. It's not really clear what it is we're looking at right away. Two slides of two viral bodies, very similar, but with minor enough differences too confuse a computer, glow with an eerie translucence over her visage as she speaks.

"I said it would take me months, maybe years to compare the virus, slide by slide, with everything in our database. And I was right. If I had been a fool and started at the beginning. But that's ridiculous. Whoever orchestrated this wouldn't have started with a benign virus, or one that gave people the sniffles. They would have started with something big. Something already incredibly virulent. So that was where I started looking. I started with viruses that had a 75% and higher mortality rate. Then I excluded any that had less than three symptoms in common with our mystery virus."

She is sweating, her hair is plastered to her forehead. There is a certain glassiness to her eyes. Fatigue? Or fever?

"It still took five days to find. And why anyone would have altered the original virus I don't understand. I didn't even consider it at first. It was on my list of rejected options. After all, who would alter a virus that already has 99.9% fatality rate?"

Tapping the keys, she has the computer line up the viruses, making it even more obvious that indeed, the two are closely related. But it also makes the differences stand out.

"The capsid is thicker, protecting the virus. And the lipid envelop is huge. Part of what made the virus so large. The modified virus is nearly 100 times larger than the original. But it's not all in the outer coating. That wouldn't change the density. No, most of the changes are inside the virus. The sheer amount of DNA that's been packed in to this thing is staggering. Normally, a virus is the most stripped down organism that can even be generously considered 'alive', and this virus was already a pretty complex one, as far as viruses go. But the new version- the top image is shrunk to show the match- the new version has multiple slight variations of the virus's genetic material contained within it. I'm going to have to deconstruct the genetic code before I can learn anything about it. But, I guess I have all the time in the world."

She leans back, closing her eyes for a moment.

"I don't understand why anyone would alter the Gulag plague," she said, finally naming the virus. "But they did. And they used my planet as it's testing ground." Her voice is thick and bitter.

"I'll keep researching. The more I know about the virus, the more maybe, just maybe, I'll learn about it's creator."

​She makes no mention of her previous entry. Nor will she ever.
 
[member="Irajah Ven"]

Suppose asking her how her day has been is out of the question...

"Yes, hunter is one way of putting it," he said, pausing for a moment, as he tapped at a few things on his screen, though paying little attention to what he was doing. A deep breath followed, and his gaze returned to the view screen on which [member="Skye Mertaal"] currently occupied.

"I have a target... she knows something... one that needs to be taken alive and unharmed," he added, scratching an itch at the back of his head, though it did little to relieve it. Perhaps it was not the itch that truly needed attention.

"Tell me, Miss Mertaal, " he paused for a moment, a feint grin forming on his lips, as he asked, "How experienced are you in capturing targets in an environmental suit?"
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

Mertaal gave a slight exhale through her nose, a brief "Heh," that blew the strands of her dark hair from her face. The cherry glow of that cybernetic patch seemed to flare for a moment, the whir and whiz of tiny mechanical pieces a low hum for her to hear.

"Reckon I'd have to double-check my carbonite gun to answer that," she replied plainly. Her finger rose, scratching at the side of her jaw. The flick of the pink tip of her tongue swept over the fullness of her lip, a nervous tick she couldn't quite get rid of when it came to him.

"I can do it just fine," she said with a bit less sass after that, giving a slight incline of her head. It was hard, seeing him there. Taking another deep breath, the Hunter lowered her lids and then took to leaning forward. Her fingers curled around a datapad, and she made a great show of turning it on. Honestly, it was something to keep her hands busy.

"Who's the target?" it was strange having him comm to ask her for a job. He was never really keen on it, even if it did provide for them a bit while they were laying low.

Granted, he never had been keen on anyone leaving the Helm at all.

Well.. back then.
 
[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

Her words of assurance was unnecessary. It would be tricky work for certain, and it was dangerous. He knew she was more than capable of handling the job. So were probably a half other dozen people he could pull up from his database. Only problem was, he couldn't trust them like he could her.

"I don't have much information on her yet... a doctor..." he said, pausing for a moment, as if realising the danger he could be putting her in. His eyes wandered from the viewer for a moment. He'd spent so much of these past couple of years trying to keep her out of it... yet here he was, bringing danger to her this time. His voice sank in his throat for a moment at this realisation, but he wasn't left with many options at this point.

"A survivor..." he added, his gaze returning to the view screen.


"I am still working out the details, they are scattered at the moment, but nearing as I can tell, she is the lone survivor of her planet... and I aim to find out why," he said.
 
His system pinged. Despite hyperspace coordinates pointing to Tatooine, they had pulled up no record of her on the planet. No surprise there. Records there were scarce. But once a wider net was cast, something did come up.

​Mon Calamari. She had been admitted to one of the hospitals there, less than a week ago, and discharged. No record of her leaving the planet could be found, and the system was coming up blank on her name in any other locations. It seemed likely that she was still there, somewhere.

[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Skye Mertaal"]
 
[member="Irajah Ven"] [member="Jonathon Patches"]

A doctor?

The last time they had one of those around; well, that had been Tahira. There was a sobering to her expression, and Mertaal didn't meet Patches' eyes.

"I see..." she said quietly, but it indicated there was more there than initially expressed. The anger had waned, as it had a tendency to when it came to situations like this. All that was left was just the hurt.

"I take it you're doing the job for a reason or just satisfying your curiosity?" she asked, needing to know the why. Why now? Why this job? Why call me out of the blue to ask for my help?

What made this doctor so important that he'd finally be arsed to comm her?
 
[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

A time not so long ago, in a galaxy not so far away, Patches would have made a joke about his reasons... perhaps a claim that she was really smart while holding his hands a fair distance from his chest. Or maybe he would have claimed she was a holo soap star, and he was just a really big fan.

Those days, despite not being that long ago, seemed a distance past. Humour did not seem the appropriate measure at this moment, as he was certain both their thoughts were flip flopping between happier days... and sadder ones. Instead, he feigned a smile; a hollow one to be exact, but gave his best effort to mask it.

"My reasons are sound..." he said, though realised that would not be enough to satisfy her own curiosity. He didn't know exactly for certain what was his true motivation.

"I fear she may be in danger... or others may be in danger, and she may hold the answers to both questions," he clarified.

Or maybe I was just searching for an excuse to... though he dare not finish that thought.
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Irajah Ven"]


“So another job…” The ‘Patches way’, no doubt.

The Hunter couldn’t help but say it. In her mind, she wondered if this Doctor had asked for his help. Had she sent him a message claiming he was her only hope? That with his resources, he could save the lives of others? Hold answers to a greater mystery that Jonathon Patches couldn’t walk away? Regardless of who Mertaal had become, there was still a fragment of her former self under that visage of stone. “Diving headfirst into saving the damsel in distress.” funny how that stung a little too familiar.

Is that really all it is?

As if realizing she’d said too much, Mertaal shifted in her seat. “I need a location.” she began to outline. “All you have on her whereabouts. Anything on her.” She could start the job and research a bit more. By then, she was already avoiding his gaze.

“You still have access to my databanks. The encryption is the same. Send me what you have and I can get started on it."
 
Hmmm. That was odd. Patches' system could find no further record of her activities on Mon Calamari. Considering the type of world it was, that didn't seem possible. Unlike Tatooine, she would need a name, a real identity, to do anything there. Rent a room, buy a ticket off planet, anything. But for the last few days, there was no trace of her. Impossible on a world like Mon Cal. If she'd been discharged from the hospital like the record showed, she must have gone somewhere.

But the official records went cold.

Which implied that either she'd never actually left that hospital, or she'd left by means other than through the front doors.

[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Jonathon Patches"]
 
[member="Irajah Ven"] [member="Skye Mertaal"]

The bait was there... this may not be the Patches of old, a shell of his former self; but this is still Patches after all. His wits hadn't left him; just his desire to use them these days. So it was out of reflex more so than desire, when he countered her damsel in distress comment with a quip of his own.

"Well, I figured diving in head first would be better than diving in with other parts of the anatomy," he said, a brief lip curling upwards, though the delivery wasn't his usual self.

Patches eyes wandered briefly to the tracer he was conducting on Irajah. The trail appeared to go cold on Mon Calamari. Curious, he mused to himself.

"Mon Calamari," he said, returning his gaze to Skye, as he added, "Trail goes cold after that."

"I will see what I can find before you get there... how soon can you meet me there?" he asked.
 
That caught her attention.

Mertaal flicked her gaze back up to the information broker. For a few seconds, the woman seemed to be searching for something. After a moment, she finally said.

"A day," she replied quietly, "I'm orbiting Concordia. Shouldn't take me long." another run of her fingers through her hair, as if the thick rebelling mass just couldn't stay put.

"I can meet you on Hikahi." it was one of Dac's major spaceports, busy enough to blend in but not too crazy to be flooded by tourists.

Right, now what? There was a pressing need to say something else, but what else was there to say?

"So... yeah. Just send me whatever else you come up with."

[member="Irajah Ven"] [member="Jonathon Patches"]
 
Twenty Five Days after Viral Event

"I buried my father yesterday."

It's a different room this time. It looks like a small office. No medical supplies, and gurnies, but there are diplomas on the wall with her name on it, and assorted interesting odds and ends, bits and bobs from a lifetime of strange and assorted interests. Just in sight of the camera is a picture of a dark haired little girl, hugging a woman who closely resembles the one in front of the camera now. Resembles, but is clearly not the same person.

Irajah is sitting in a comfortable, spinning chair, her head in her hands. All the screen can see to start is the top of her head.

"I can't bury them all. I didn't think I could. I mean, I didn't even think I could try. But I thought maybe I could do more than just him."

She shakes her head, her sleeves falling to the sides. The bruises are deeper, alarmingly violet and almost swollen as if the blood is pooling just beneath the skin now.

"I'm weak. Too weak. It took me all day and half of the night just to bury him. I did it, but it took so much. I don't think I can do it again. I thought the virus had taken everything. But now I'm finding that it's taken even more."

Her voice is tight, and it's clear, though her face is hidden, that she is holding back tears. "I'll have to do something. I have to clear a section out. A single hallway. Even if this virus doesn't kill me, there are other disease concerns with the dead bodies. I can wear a containment suit when I go out, but I need a place that's clear to work. I just. For now I think I'll rest. Tomorrow. Tomorrow is soon enough to start."

[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Jonathon Patches"]
 

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