Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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It's Very Cold & Dark In Space

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

"Hikahi sounds fine. I'm two days out myself," he said, his fingers tapping a few screens on his console, as he queued up the files he had on their target thus far. A few more moments passed, as a look of concern entered his features, his gaze returning to the view screen.

"Wait for me. She's dangerous Skye... don't want you..." he paused for a moment, his eyes briefly wandering, before returning to the view screen, "to get a head start without me," he added, a feint smile on his face.

A few more taps, and what he had gathered thus far was sent. Not every journal entry he had uncovered, but enough, and the ones that had the details.

"Files are on their way," he said.
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

For a moment, she thought he would say something else. That maybe, just maybe, a flicker of whatever he typically hid behind his mask would come through. What she'd seen at Velusia. Beyond the typical pomp and circumstance he vacillated in.

"Dangerous?" brow arching, she awaited the transfer. It would be a minute or two before the encrypted data packet made it her way.

"For a moment there I thought you were going to say you didn't want me to get hurt." she lowered her gaze, acting as if she were scanning some information on a nearby screen.

"But we both know that if you stare into the abyss long enough, it stares right back." Her jaw tensed, and she bit her lower lip. Dangerous didn't even come close to what she'd lived through. What she still did.

"Yeah, well...I'll see you on Hikahi."
 
[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

Well... this is going to go swimmingly I can see, he thought to himself.

He repressed a frown as best he could. Though he knew she meant no ill words, her words did still sting a bit when she remarked she thought he was expressing concern. I thought that was implied...


"I will umm..." he paused for a moment, searching for some words that never seem to come his way, as what words he did fine weren't very helpful, "I will send wave once I enter the system."

His finger hovered over the console for a few seconds, though neither party had anything much to add at this point it appeared.

"It's good to see you," he finally said, followed by a quick nod, and an even quicker tapping of the console, as the transmission was ended.

Yup... this isn't going to be awkward at all, he mused to himself.
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"]

"... It's good to see you too..."

Although the only witness to Skye's admission was mere static and the sudden blank screen of a disconnected transmission. A great sigh fell from her lips.

"Gorram it!" she cursed, slipping her face onto her hands. Where did things go wrong? How did things come to this? Honestly, she didn't know. What she did know is that in two days time, she'll see him in the flesh.

Mertaal didn't have to take the job. She could have left it be. But she didn't. With another weary sigh, the woman threaded her fingers through the thick mass of waves that shrouded her heart-shaped face.

Two days.

Yeah, this wasn't going to be awkward at all...

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Computers are so cold. Patches' system simply kept blinking and collating on, oblivious of all of the awkwardness.

The woman had certainly not gone anywhere on Mon Calamari. After several minutes of continued searching, that much was confirmed. So where had she gone? People just didn't disappear, not on planets like that. Digging deeper in to the hospital records however turned up something.

The same day she was supposedly discharged, a medical ship had left the hospital. The ship and it's crew were labeled Quarantine in the system, indicating that they were to be kept under watch once they reached their destination. Which was.... the Medical Station that orbited the planet. Hmmm. And a day before that, the Medical Station had set up an additional Quarantine ward, above and beyond the three they usually maintained. The work orders were interesting. Completely cut off the air system from the rest of the station. Triple bio security measures. Low pressure so that if there was a breech, air would be sucked in, rather than blowing out. Excessive. Perhaps.

Unless they were taking someone there who had a bio-engineered version of the Gulag virus running a rump parliament in their body of course.

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

Oh, it's awkward... it's awkward, he mused to himself, fiddling with the collar of his jacket for the seventh time in the past ten minutes, by his own estimation.

He had a table, in the back corner of the bar at Hikahi spaceport. It was a more reputable bar than he suspected either of them were used to. This was a major trading port - of the legal variety... mostly - and as such, a lower than usual profile wasn't exactly necessary. Though he suspected the bag under the table full of forged ID badges, a doctor and nurses uniform, and forged transit passes would raise an eyebrow or two.

As the server came to ask for his order, Patches was just as surprised as she was that he ordered water.

Water? No rye to wash that down with? he questioned himself, though he supposed pretending to be a medical professional later on with whisky on his breath would raise suspicion.

The files on their target, Irajah, provided both a glimmer of hope and raised more than a few concerns. He believed he had tracked her down to a secure facility. Secure meant they would be safe, as it would have the proper facilities to conduct their questioning... secure also meant it was going to be more difficult to get into.

So there he sat, waiting... his least favourite thing to do.

Yup... going to be awkward.

Scratch that, being left alone with his thoughts was new least favourite thing to do.
 
[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

Okay.

Just breathe.

By all accounts, all Mertaal had to do was go to the meetup, see Patches, figure out where the target was at and continue on from there. Simple enough, they'd done it a dozen times before her departure from the Helm.

The only difference being is that this time around, the context was all wrong, there was no jovial banter, and Tahira wasn't harping about wanting to come with.

Tahira.

A grimace cut across the Hunter's expression, barely shadowed by the low tuck of the wide brim of her hat. Her hair was plaited in a thick braid, reaching almost down to the middle of her back. Along with the few stray tendrils and the wide brim, it kept her face in the shadows for the most part. Well, save for the bright cherry glow of her cybernetic eyepatch that covered her right eye.

By all accounts, if Jonathon Patches had dressed up for the occasion, Skye well... needless to say, having a fashion sense never did stick with her. Perhaps that was one measure of familiarity for the Information Broker once he'd see her -- and frankly, there was no denying it was her.

She still had that graceful gait of hers, the sort that had her moving almost silently from one place to the next. In another life, he'd remarked about her legs, her ankles, the way she walked that would ruin the illusion. Funny, how that even after all this time, that still hadn't changed.

Well worn britches, tanned, tucked into knee-high black boots with a layer of dust that likely could have used a wipe or two. A button up blouse of an off blue-gray color of a stormy sky. With Mon Cal still under patrol, public display of weapons was a no-no for the folk around here, but if Patches could bet a twenty credit chip, he'd guess that there were shivs tucked in her boot and elsewhere on her person; and he'd be right.

A thick brown leather coat completed the ensemble, what with a bracelet comm that doubled as a paddle beam gun. Space traveler is what she was aiming for, and she managed to do that just fine. Who else was she to impress while floating alone out in the black? None but herself.

So it was without further ado that it would be Patches who would catch sight of her first. Would he call her over or simply wait for her to see him, well... guess that was all on him.
 
[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Irajah Ven"]

She stuck out like a Bantha on Hoth. Oh, he was certain to the rest of the patrons she blended in well enough. Enough to cause a glance or two, maybe linger for a moment, and then move on. However, to the much more trained and familiar eye of Patches, her long, lithe legs betrayed her. Her strides lacked a certain grace, more forced than natural. Every third step had a subtle hitch, and her turns almost had a slight waddle to them; no doubt from numerous broken bones that had healed themselves and been broken again over the years.

Again, to the average eye, none of this would be noticed; but Patches eyes were more familiar than others. Though he did suppose for a moment, that maybe none of that was there and it was all in his head; though he dare not voice that thought. Come to think of it, probably best if I don't voice any of those thoughts, he mused to himself.

He was certain she hadn't caught sight of him yet, and rather than draw attention to himself by flagging her down, he leaned in close to the server, whispering something in her ear. A few moments passed, as the server made a detour to the bar, on her way to Skye, tapping her on the shoulder, and no doubt repeating what he had asked, word for word.

"Excuse me Miss? The famous Holo-net star, Mr. Flynn Rider has requested your presence at his table," she said, pointing to his table in the far corner, then served up an empty glass to her, with a slightly confused look, "he also asked that I give you this..." she added, handing Skye the empty glass.

A small smirk found it's way to Patches lips, remembering times long past.
 
64 Days after Viral Event

She looks tired. But then, she always looks tired. It has been over a month since the last entry. What has she been doing all this time? Unfortunately, only part of that is revealed. The part she thinks is the most important at the moment.

"I know why the altered virus is so large now," she says without preamble.

She is sitting in her office again, but some things have changed. There are more holographs on the walls- images of an older man with dark hair and tattoos on his face, images of the woman in the first holo, images of the pair of them, sometimes will a child and sometimes just the two. Happy, smiling. Family to watch over her shoulder. Obviously she has returned to her home since the last entry, but she makes no comment about it.

The office also has more of a lived in quality. Though neat, it's possible to see a hammock slung in a corner, clothing hung on makeshift hooks. The desk isn't dirty, but there is more clutter on it, including the remains of whatever she'd been eating last.

"Whomever created it including the genetic coding for every small variation of the Gulag Plague that.... well, perhaps ever existed. Including mutations not in the system at all. Rather than a single, mutated virus, this pathogen contains every mutation within it. A virus like this would naturally mutate over time. But this version has the potential to mutate much faster- more data, more chances for corruption over each generation. It could eventually mutate in to a less deadly form- many viruses over the course of history have done that. After all, if it cannot replicate in a host enough before the host dies, that's a maladaptive strategy for most pathogens. Being spread, copying itself, that should be the goal. But the original version of the virus never did that- never became less deadly. But with all of the additional genetic material here, there's a chance of that happening. But over what kind of time frame?"

She leans back, haggard but thoughtful.

"There's no way to even guess. But I would bank on not within my lifetime. The virus spreads so efficiently, the usual stop gaps that would encourage a less deadly mutation aren't there. It is able to replicate and spread to new hosts before the old one dies, so there is no pressure for a less destructive version to succeed."

Irajah sighs, rubbing her hand over her face.

"It's already as good as it needs to be. Any further mutation will likely not be in my favor."

Her shirt cuffs slip, revealing that the deep bruising from two months ago is still there.

"It's not mutating as any rate beyond what would be expected in my own body. It's replicating because it can't help but do that, but the individual viroids aren't long lived. In my body at least, because it's not killing me, the rate of replication and cell death have reached a balance. I don't think the creators of this ever expected to be studying it in such a manner."

Her face hardens.

"Nor will they. I am a little surprised that, after all this time, no one has come to look at their handiwork. I have been expecting company in some for or another for two months now, but all of the airspace around our world has been as dead as the planet itself. But no one has come. It seems as though the destruction of my people was enough of a show."

Teeth grit together, Irajah's face darkening.

"If I'm ever going to find who did this, I will have to find a way off planet. I've never piloted a ship. I don't even know how to start one up. But I can learn."

Leaning over to switch off the recording, she whispers, more to herself than anything else.

"I can learn."

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

The hunter took the glass in hand. For a moment she stood there, fingers curled around the lowball. That gray eye carefully swept over the surface of the clear material, watching momentarily as the light was filtering through it, empty in the literal sense save for fragments of memories that tumbled within it.

He gave her only pieces you see. Portions of a larger puzzle that she was still trying to put together. They were scattered here and there, but a few key pieces would snap into place to make the overall picture brighter, more vibrant in her regards.

This was one of them.

Flynn Rider. Holo-net star. Arrogant. Obnoxious.

How dare you wield such flippancy without requisite shame.

The corner of her mouth had given an upward perk before she knew it. Her expression softened. The next second, Skye lifted her lids, pulling her gaze from the empty tumbler. She caught him then. Far corner table, back to the wall, eyes to the door. Ah, there he was.

Knuckles grew white for a moment as she lowered the glass to her side. The next minute saw her slow amble to him. A dozen thoughts swept through her mind. What should I say? Should I ask him how he's been? That he doesn't look as if he's been eating well? Or should I just go straight to the objective?

Swallowing hard, in the end, she simply slid into the seat just a bit off to his side, also keeping sight of the front door. With a smooth motion, she set the empty glass upside down in front of the Information Broker.

"You do realize..." she began, tapping the bottom of the tumbler, "That even if it is empty, I can still throw it at your head?"
 
Well... that escalated quickly, he mused to himself, though he was quite she was joking. Well, quite certain may have been a stretch, but fairly confident? Somewhat?

Despite his inner ramblings and his mind crunching the odds on just how likely it would be that she would throw the empty glass at his head, he flashed a smile, and at least appeared to not be too concerned of the threat.

"Can we get some water for the lady?" he asked loudly, waving his hand to the server, and then pointing to his table.

He then gave Skye a small shrug, and remarked "What? Water is far easier to clean up than shards of glass from my cheek."

Hurts less too...

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

It was easy, to slip right back into the banter. To hear him make a quip here and there, flash that roguish devil may care grin and see him sit as if he didn't have a care in the 'verse.

Too easy.

Sitting here, watching him across the table. Observing the slight cant to his head. The way he lounged back against his chair. It was almost as if he simply came to life from her memories. A little more lifelike, a bit more vibrant. Same unabashed confidence.

"Expecting to say anything that would get you a face full of water, then?" she queried, a dark brow arching in turn. Fingers slid from the bottom of the glass and gingerly swept over the sides. An idle tap, a nervous gesture. A tell.

It was strange as it was familiar to be sitting here beside him. To a degree, the Hunter wasn't sure what to make of it. On the way here, there had been a measure of apprehension along with the edge of lingering anger. Disappointment, maybe?

So here we are...
 
104 Days After Viral Event

In the beginning, the entries had been professional, clipped and precise. Even when she had been barely surviving the initial throes of the virus, she had been the Doctor. But slowly, with no one to talk to but the computer, the entries had been getting more informal, more familiar.

"I went home today," she says, her voice quiet and distant. Though she is sitting in the office, facing the computer screen, her eyes are staring off somewhere above it.

"I spent a couple hours going through everything. I'll go back tomorrow. Or the day after. Yes, I have to work on the ship tomorrow. Well, I suppose I don't have to. I'm the only one keeping track of my progress."

She pauses, chewing on her thumbnail for a moment before finally looking at the recorder.

"I guess I'd been hoping to find something. Some trace of his life as a Jedi. Maybe some idea of why he'd left. But it looks like he didn't keep any of it. If he hadn't told me himself....." she trails off, leaning back in her chair, looking tired. "He really wanted nothing to do with it. He didn't keep any holos from before marrying mom, or a robe or....."

Irajah shakes her head, actually chuckling, but there's no mirth in the sound.

"Come on Irajah, nothing to hide here. How silly was it to hope he'd kept his lightsaber? What would I even do with one if he had? Carry it around? Use it to open canned goods? With my luck, I'd probably cut my hand off trying to get in to a can of Nerf-stew."

She sighs, leaning forward and putting her elbows on the desk. Resting her chin on her hands she murmurs softly, her tone distant again.

"I did find his old medical text books. Nostalgic, but not particularly useful. And mom's paintings. He'd kept all of them. Both of ours. Mine from when I was a kid, as neatly filed as hers were. The Jedi didn't matter to him, but we did."

Softly, she smiles, but it's a sad smile. "That's something at least, right?"

​[member="Jonathon Patches"] [member="Skye Mertaal"]
 
"Anything that word warrant such a response? Hardly," he quipped, as she played with her empty glass, before the server came by and filled it at Patches request, with water.

"However, a lack of warrant hasn't stopped you in the past," he added, shortly after the server had taken her leave.

While the used of a warrant could apply to the life of a bounty hunter, both parties here knew, that Patches was merely claiming innocence on whether any of his past face full of water was justified. He settled into his seat, as a brief moment of silence passed between the two; or it felt as though it did to Patches at least, before he found some words.

"You look good..." he said softly, though the marks on her -at least those that could be seen - did not go entirely unnoticed, as he added, "those bruises really bring out your colour."

Though the comment may have been a jest, there was a hint of concern in his tone.

How did we get here...

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

A slight curl of Mertaal's forefinger went sliding along the side of the glass, condensation from the ice already collecting in clear beads. Her finger carved a short path upon it, her gray eye following the trace in a subtle attempt to keep herself busy.

Odd, how the awkwardness grew between them both. After everything, one would have thought that there wouldn't be any at all.

Yet here we were...

Swallowing hard, she gave an incline of her head, the wide brim of her hat shadowing her face for a brief moment. I should really take that off, she thought to herself, feeling foolish for wanting to keep it on and even more so for knowing she had to take it off. That internal battle resulted with her removing it from her head, setting it down beside her on the table.

A little bit thinner but with the same lines to her face. The cybernetic eyepatch appeared stark against her tanned skin, and those scattered bruises a pale olive green. Some new. Others were old.

Skye's shoulders gave a slight upward twitch at the quiet compliment, although perhaps it was the touch of concern that ended up stinging the most. How could he sit there, acting as of we just saw each other yesterday?

"Yes well, you always did say I have a way with people." she jested in turn, her mild form of wryness coming out a bit too dry. Jokes, well, were never my forte.

Glancing up, she caught the slight tightening around his eyes. Unable to help herself, she let her gaze trace over the Information Broker's features. Yeah, a little bit thinner, but otherwise alright. She caught him studying her, his chest rising and falling, and his lips straight, almost sympathetic.

Six months, Skye reminds herself.

"You seem like you're doing alright." she added, lowering her gaze again. It seemed as if they were going round and round the pink bantha in the room.

"Still on the Helm I take it?" or was it his new port of operations when he bought another ship at the last expo?
 
Oh, small talk... my idle nemesis.

Small talk was a funny thing. It was used by people whom knew little of one and other, but that didn't apply in this scenario. Others used it as nothing more than idle chatter; it had a long tradition of being used by those that couldn't stand one and other, but keep things civil. Patches didn't think applied here either... and then there was the third form, a filler or distraction from the reality that both parties would rather avoid...

So this is what it's come to, he mused to himself, any form of smile that may have been on his face slowly fading at that realisation.

"Surviving," he said bluntly, unable to find better words to describe his current situation.

Brief moments of the old Patches would show himself from time to time, a flicker of a man long past; but those days were few and far between. Now a bit older, a bit wiser, and a bit emptier inside. The weight of past actions finally had caught up with him; those lost haunted his thoughts and dreams these days. A pain that he kept hidden... and if Patches knew few things, one of them was how to remain hidden.

A casual shrug soon followed at her query, as he answered, "Aye, the Helm still serves it's purpose just fine..."

It's quiet... too quiet...

"And how is that little Firespray of yours doing? Serving your enterprise well?" he asked, shifting the focus from him.

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

His answer prompted Mertaal to lift her head, catching his eyes. Surviving. Yeah, that was something she could understand. That she had felt. A bit as if drifting along by.

The passing comment on the Helm almost begged a quip to be made about the ownership of specific areas of that freighter, but it felt as if saying it aloud would start the funnel of that downward spin again-- but not in they way it used to be. Back then he'd joke that he was the captain of the ship and as long as she was in it, she’d have to do what he said. At that point, she had said, ‘fine, I’ll leave!’ He stop her, she’d push him against the wall, he’d try to talk some sense and then a begrudged compromise would follow suit.

The only difference now was that she had left.

“Doing fine. Mobile. Flying well.” a pause then then half nod of acknowledgment, “No crashes.” terrible joke, but that was as much as her dry humor could give. It was hard when he was sitting in front of her, seemingly so distant. Watching her with that veiled expression. Patches had always been a man hard to read, but right now even more so. It frustrated her as much as it annoyed her. There had been a time where she thought she knew him. Where she believed she managed to see a glimpse of someone he rarely ever showed. But oft times the mind only perceives what the heart wants to. If he didn't want me to leave, why didn't he ask me to stay?

At this point, Mertaal was feeling antsy. What was the point in going over whatifs and maybes? Her hand ran through the wayward dark locks that had fallen over her face. She pushed them back, tucking them behind her ear. Looking up at the Information Broker, she gave a nod. Right, bounty target.

The reason why Jonathon wanted me here.

“So, what do you have to say?” she asked, looking up from her glass of water expectantly.
 
No crashes, he mused to himself... a few newer scratches on the hall indicated at the very least there may have been some near misses, but he decided not to press. There was a time, where he would have been impressed that she had even been capable of landing the craft; though that was a time long past. He supposed that much time had passed since then.

The query as to what he had to say, could be answered in many a number of ways. Somewhere around three-thousand, four-hundred and seventy-eight possible responses came to mind, many of which would result in a variety of outcomes; at least eighty-three of those responses would result in water ending up in his face, by his estimation.

Best to avoid those, he mused to himself.

So instead, he went with the professional, response.

"How do you look in a nurses uniform?" he asked, and then added, "think you can pass as friendly and accommodating for a spell?"

Ok, maybe that wasn't the MOST professional response, and many have been one of the many responses that may get a rise out of her, but this was a unique opportunity to make light of the situation, and there was some truth to his questions; a disguise was necessary.

"We are breaking into a medical facility..." he added as clarification.

[member="Skye Mertaal"] [member="Irajah Ven"]
 
Meanwhile, at the Medical Facility in orbit around Mon Calamari.....

A small droid and a human female sat alone in a Quarantine suite. It was as comfortable as a place like that could possibly be made, with a small sitting area set aside for social use. But what social use could they possibly expect for her? A holo-chess board sat on the table, abandoned now.

Some of her smile faded as the droid mentioned infection. It sounded almost benign when said like that. She tried to rally the smile when Six-Nine 'patted' her shoulder (After all, how often do you meet a droid that would offer that kind of very human motion of comfort? She couldn't think of a time). But it was half hearted at best.

"I'm not sure if there's much you can help me with, Six-Nine," she said at last. "But mostly that's because I don't think there's much anyone here can do to help me. There's no cure for what I have. It's contained, but your.... well... coworkers?.... don't really believe, or trust that."

She leaned back with a sigh and a self deprecating half smirk.

"Not that I blame them. I'm already starting to feel better," which was true, though she still needed rest. She wasn't about to go out running marathons or anything. "But I'm stuck here until....."

She trailed off. Until what? Until they were sure there was no cure? That could take weeks. Until they were confident she wasn't a risk to people around her?

In that case, she would be here forever.

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

For a moment, Mertaal wasn't quite sure if she'd heard correctly. In the past, Patches had a way about him that included saying whatever he could to get a reaction from her. A large majority of the time it worked.

The sudden shock and perhaps surprise of it had the intended effect. Score for the Information Broker in bringing a bit of their lighthearted conversation in an otherwise tension filled moment.

"What?" had been her first response, the familiar scowl carving her tanned visage. One grey eye and a bright red cybernetic ocular went narrowing at the scruffy face scoundrel.

At least until he clarified.

"A medical facility?" oh this ought to be good. Breaking into any facility on Dac was going to be difficult enough. Security had heightened tenfold what with the One Sith threat.

"Here?" her voice fell an octave with the hoarse whisper.

"And what exactly are we getting from this medical facility?"
 

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