Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Private Joint Project

The workshop was quiet in the way only Aren's spaces ever were.

Not empty—never empty—but deliberately still. The hum of power conduits ran low and steady through the walls, tools sat where they had been left with intention rather than haste, and the faint glow of holoscreens painted the room in cool blues and muted ambers. Every surface had a purpose. Every object was where it was because she had decided it belonged there.

Omen was seated on the reinforced workbench, boots planted on the floor, shoulders loose but not slack. He wasn't restrained. He wasn't prepped. His jacket was still on, sleeves rolled just enough to expose the interfaces at his forearms—old fittings, well-maintained but unmistakably outdated. The kind of cybernetics that still worked because the man attached to them refused to let them fail, not because they were optimal.

Aren stood a few steps away, not touching him yet.

She held a slim datapad in one hand, stylus resting against the edge, eyes moving between readouts and him with the same steady focus she gave any system she intended to understand fully before altering. Diagnostic overlays hovered in the air between them, translucent lines mapping connection points, feedback latency, signal drift. Nothing alarming. Nothing urgent.

Which, in its own way, was the point.

"This isn't surgery," she said at last, tone even, almost casual. "I'm not replacing anything today."

She glanced up at him then, just briefly, as if checking not for consent—she already had that—but for something subtler. Readiness. Mood. Whether he was here because he wanted the work done or because he trusted her to be the one looking at him this closely.

"Think of it as… a proper assessment," she continued, setting the datapad down on the nearby console. "You've been compensating for signal lag in your right hand for a while. You adjust without thinking. It works, but it's not clean." A pause. "And it's been worse since Ilum."

She moved closer, finally entering his space, but stopped short of contact. Close enough that he could feel her presence shift the air, close enough that her shadow fell across his arms and the exposed interfaces. She didn't reach for him yet. Instead, she reached past him, pulling a tray closer with her foot—tools lay out neatly, untouched.

"This is the part where I look," she said. "And you decide if you're staying."

Her eyes met his then—steady, unflinching, unhurried. "No pressure. No pride games. We stop if and when you say stop."

The workshop hummed on around them, patient and waiting, as Aren stood there with the quiet certainty of someone who would not rush what mattered.

And for the first time, the work had not yet begun—but the choice had already been placed between them.

Sergeant Omen Sergeant Omen
 

Sergeant Omen

Arc Trooper Sergeant of the 41st Elite Corps
"So, are you looking at my pics of my perfect body on there or just my arms?" It was the Clone's attempt at an ice breaker as he sat on the bench like a young boy before his examination. "If you wanted the true doctor patient experience, I could get one of those gowns on before we start. You know... for medical reasons." Despite both his and her best efforts to keep his body calm, his fingers couldn't help drum on the metal top of the exam table. Letting someone else take care of him was harder than it was to take care of Aren. Guess he knew what it felt like now to be at the whim of the kindness of another.

Nodding at Aren's statment at this was just a checkup, Omen put up a half smile while trying to show her he was ready for the change. "You don't have to stand there like I'm contagious. I know these need replaced sooner or later. Might as well be sooner and you are the best tech on planet if not the enitire galaxy so you are the best choice to do it. And by the look in his eyes, Aren would tell he believed it. As his Lover approached with her tray of tools, Omen tried to reach his arms out so she could see his arm's internals. They had been cobbled together before he had went to prison and even more so with the raw materials that could be found to repair them when they started to faulter. It was a miracle they were working as well as they were and he didn't deny it when she brought up the issues of signal lag with the wiring, letting out an exhale as he repied like trying to get over a wave with a surfboard on Crait. "Well... Atleast my mind is still sharp, thats a blessing..."

As Aren inched closer, the Clone reached over to grab her hand, gving it a squeeze that was seconds longer than it should hve been. It told her just how much Omen needed this exam. "You can turn the nervous centers off first, I won't feel a thing but I'm ready. But if you want to kiss your patient, maybe it will get better all on its own." In a perfect world, thats all it would take to make his arms like new again. But it looks like they would have to get down and dirty, doing this the hard way. Still, it would be nice to have full control again.

Aren D'Shade Aren D'Shade
 
Aren did not rise to the bait. Not because she missed it, but because she chose not to reward it.

She set the tray down on the side table with deliberate care, each tool placed where her hand would expect it later, and only then did she turn the display toward him so he could see it properly. The holos shifted at her gesture, resolving into layered schematics of his arms—external plating ghosted semi-transparent, internal architecture highlighted in clean, clinical lines. Actuators, signal relays, power routing, the improvisations he'd made over the years marked in a softer amber overlay.

"These," she said calmly, tapping two points near the elbow joint and wrist, "are the primary bottlenecks. Your response lag isn't coming from the processors themselves. It's the signal degradation along these improvised conduits. They were never meant to handle sustained load."

Her tone wasn't critical. It was factual. If anything, there was a quiet respect threaded through it.

"You kept them functioning far longer than they should have," she added. "But they're compensating now. That's why you feel the delay most when you're tired or when you're focused on fine motor skills. Your brain sends the command. The arm hesitates while the signal reroutes."

She stepped closer, not into his space yet, just near enough that he could see the fine detail on the projection reflected faintly across her features.

"What I'm proposing isn't replacement today," she continued. "Not yet. This is assessment and stabilization. I want clean diagnostics without pain interference or defensive reflexes skewing the data."

Her gaze flicked briefly to his drumming fingers before returning to his face, steady and unflinching.

"I will disengage the sensory feedback first," she said, anticipating his concern. "Not fully offline. You'll still have pressure awareness, but no sharp input. Then I'll isolate each subsystem in sequence. Power. Signal. Structural integrity. Nothing irreversible."

When he reached for her hand, she didn't pull away. Her fingers closed around his, grounding, solid, and she let the contact linger exactly as long as he needed before gently easing her hand free so she could rest it against his forearm instead.

"I'm not here to take control from you," Aren said quietly. "I'm here to give it back. At your pace." Her eyes searched his, not for permission, but for readiness. "If at any point you want me to stop, we stop," she finished. "If you have questions, ask them now. If you have reservations, say them."

Then, softer, without teasing: "And no gowns. This is a workshop, not a clinic. You're not my patient. You're my partner. And this is something we're doing together."

Sergeant Omen Sergeant Omen
 

Sergeant Omen

Arc Trooper Sergeant of the 41st Elite Corps
Omen raised an eyebrow as Aren explained all she was going to do. So it was the conduits that were the problem... That made sense; the old wiring there would be the problem. "Aka, you are surprised my arm hasn't caught on fire yet. I understand why you want to look at them since you are in them all the time." As usual, her plan made sense. Try to see how much damage there was overall, and see if this set needed to be fully replaced or not.

Giving her the Omen smile as he held her hand, he relished the contact between skin while he could. "I'll be fine. Stop selling yourself short. I know you will do a good job." His hand came forward to playfully tustle her hair. "Now stop telling me I'll be fine and actually make me fine."

The Clone rolled his eyes as she started to get to work, batting away his request for a gown. It was weird, not being able to feel her working inside his arm as he glanced at her work. He admitted to himself that he always felt more comfortable working on his armsthan let anyone else handle him but with Aren... he knew this would be a labor of love. "Yeah, thats my fault for wanting to distract you with something you like seeing. How much is this going to cost me by the way? Will just kisses suffice or do you need some other form of payment."

Aren D'Shade Aren D'Shade
 
Aren didn't look up right away when he said it. She was already working, fingers moving with practiced precision as the first diagnostic interface slid into place along the seam of his forearm. The soft hum of the equipment filled the space between them, steady and controlled, like her breathing.

"Just kisses and dinners now and then," she said at last, tone even, unembellished, as if she were confirming a maintenance schedule rather than setting terms. "I'll take care of the rest."

She glanced up at him then, briefly, meeting his eyes so he knew she meant it. Not indulgence. Not charity. Choice.

"This isn't a transaction," she continued, returning her focus to the readouts as segmented overlays bloomed across the holo. "You're not paying me to do this. I'm doing it because it needs doing, and because it's you."

Her thumb pressed lightly against his arm, anchoring him as she isolated the first subsystem. The numbers stabilized almost immediately under her touch.

"You hold the fort down while I'm gone," Aren added, quieter now. "That's all I need from you. Stay upright. Don't overextend. And don't try to 'fix' anything I've already tagged."

A pause, then the faintest hint of dry humor slipped through.

"And if you're still when I tell you to be still," she said, "I might even accept interest payments."

She adjusted a setting, and the diagnostic tone softened.

"All right," Aren finished calmly. "We're live. Let me know if anything feels off. Otherwise, breathe."

Her hand stayed steady on his arm. So did she.

Sergeant Omen Sergeant Omen
 

Sergeant Omen

Arc Trooper Sergeant of the 41st Elite Corps
Omen couldn't help but think about how fast she worked as she sped through the process. She certainly was an artist at her craft. "Kisses and dinners for the rest of your life, then. I can agree to that." He knew this wasn't a transaction, that she wanted to help him. The Clone was doing his usual teasing to make the time go by.

"Wow, you really do love me, don't you? You only say soppy stuff like that when you want care for me." The tips of his mouth moved upward as he watched her work. Thank god he couldn't feel her pulling out and putting in every part. He would be in for a lot of hurting right now if those sensors were on. "Don't worry, I'm not going to do any of my own work. I know you don't want me to show you up." When she looked up to scold him, she would see in his eyes that he understood the task she had given him and that he would do his best to fulfill it.

As she finished up and closed the interals, he would slowly play with his fingers and roll his wrist, making sure everything felt alright. And it did, no latency issues or the components making his hand twitch. She had done the One's work, and he thanked her by pulling her in by the back of her head, bringing her in for a hot and heavy kiss. The Clone only pulled away when his face started to turn blue from the lack of oxygen. "That enough of a first payment for you?" Because it certainly was for him.

Aren D'Shade Aren D'Shade
 
Aren didn't pull away when he kissed her.

She let it happen, one hand coming up automatically to brace against his shoulder, the other still resting at his forearm as if her body hadn't quite caught up with the fact that the work was done. The kiss was warm, grounding, familiar in the way that made her exhale slowly through her nose when it finally broke, not flustered so much as… reset.

She rested her forehead briefly against his, eyes half-lidded, voice low and steady when she spoke.

"That's sufficient for today," she said, dry as ever. Then, after a beat, "Interest acknowledged."

Her thumb brushed once over the seam she'd just closed, a quiet, almost unconscious check. Everything was stable. Responsive. Exactly where it should be.

"You're clean," Aren continued, pulling back just enough to look at him properly now. There was satisfaction there, muted but unmistakable. "Signal latency's gone. Conduits are holding. If something starts to feel off later, you tell me. You don't troubleshoot. You don't compensate. You tell me."

She paused, eyes narrowing a fraction as she added, "And don't test the limits just because it feels good to have full response again."

Then her mouth softened, just slightly, betraying her.

"And yes," she went on, quieter, "I do care. That's not a special occasion thing. That's just…baseline."

She straightened, already reaching for a cloth to wipe her hands, posture settling back into its familiar composure—but before stepping away, she leaned in and pressed a brief, deliberate kiss to the corner of his mouth.

"Payment accepted," Aren said calmly. "Now sit still for five more minutes so I can finish logging this. Then you can show me how impressed you are with your fingers."

Sergeant Omen Sergeant Omen
 

Sergeant Omen

Arc Trooper Sergeant of the 41st Elite Corps
Omen enjoyed the contact before just smirking and shaking his head as she pulled away. "I hear your interest in your voice like always." He knew by her actions that she really did care for him, but they really were opposites in every face of the credit, weren't they? He only hoped that wouldn't be enough to dissuade him from having a future with him.

The Clone smiled up at her as she gave the final results of her operations. It seemed like everything had gone well, like he thought it would. He held his new hands up in his defence as the tech stared him down like a beast looking at her next meal if their prey didn't behave. "Fine, Miss Mechanical Wondermaker, I'll talk to you if I need you for anything. What if I just want to have you close, though? Do I need to get a number for that?"

The kiss that impacted the corner of his mouth did surprise him. Usually, he was the one imposing his affections and kisses on her. She really must be starting to care for him if she is feeling this affectionate. The sex joke floored him even more so, though he forced himself to sit still. "Huh... You saying you care for me... Kissing me without me asking... And even saying sex jokes. You aren't the woman I first met." The broad smile on Omen's face told Aren he was only joking. "You are even better than I could have hoped. I must have brushed off on you somehow."

Aren D'Shade Aren D'Shade
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom