Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Lessons Written in Alloy

The hangar deck carried the quiet weight of a fleet that had earned its place among the stars not through ceremony or intimidation, but through repetition, repair, and the unspoken certainty that every ship present would be called upon again. Power hummed steadily through the plating beneath Veyla's boots, a low vibration that spoke of systems maintained by hands that trusted their work enough to stake lives on it.

She stepped off the docking lift alone.

There was no escort, no formal announcement beyond the armor she wore and the way she carried herself within it, helmet resting against her hip with fingers loosely hooked through its strap, her presence defined not by display but by purpose. The light traced the softened edges of her plates where use had worn away sharpness, leaving faint scars that no amount of polishing could erase.

Veyla paused at the edge of the bay, giving the space its due before crossing it. These ships were not built to impress at first glance. Their strength showed in reinforced seams, in modular alterations layered over years rather than redesigned from scratch, in the absence of anything that did not serve a function. This was a fleet made to endure, to adapt, and to return.

Mig Gred stood near one of the vessels, unmistakable not because he demanded attention, but because the space around him felt claimed through familiarity rather than force. He belonged here in a way rank could not manufacture.

She approached without haste and stopped at a respectful distance, posture open and grounded, neither deferential nor confrontational. This was not a transaction, nor a demand dressed as courtesy. It was the beginning of something that required honesty to be worth pursuing.

Her gaze met his, steady and unguarded.

"Mig Gred," she said calmly, her voice carrying clearly through the open hangar. "Veyla Krinn, Clan Kryze."

She let the name rest where it belonged, neither pressing its legacy nor retreating from it.

"I reached out because your fleet and the people who keep it flying were described to me as builders before warriors," Veyla continued, her eyes briefly tracing the hull behind him before returning to his face. "People who understand that a weapon isn't finished when it fires for the first time, but when it survives repair after repair, deployment after deployment, and still makes sense to the hands that inherit it."

She shifted her weight slightly, relaxed but attentive, her hands deliberately empty.

"I'm not here to buy ships, claim command, or strip knowledge from context," she said plainly. "And I'm not interested in shortcuts that turn craft into imitation."

A slow breath followed, measured.

"I want to learn how you and yours think when you build," Veyla said, choosing her words with care. "How you decide what matters when steel, power, and intent meet. What lessons don't survive schematics, and what mistakes only teach once if you're paying attention."

Her gaze held his, steady.

"If that knowledge is something you're willing to share, even in fragments," she finished, "then I'm willing to put in the time to learn it the right way."

The hangar hummed around them, ships quiet but attentive, metal bearing witness.

Veyla waited for Mig Gred to answer.

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 
Alor of Clan Gred, Mando'ad'jetii
Mig looked over at the newomer. Veyla told him what she was hoping for. To learn how Clan Gred built things and survived out here. He looked at her, then back at the YV-666 he was checking up on. It had the markings of a slaver ship, but was clearly being sanded and examined for structural integrity. He then looked back, removing his helmet. It was something he picked up when taking to people, even other Mandos.

"Well, never turn down someone willing to learn." He said, noticing her connection to the Force, but he couldn't get much more than that. Still, he knew he had to lay out some expectation. Wasn't like this life was easy, especially depending on any particular Mandalorian's beliefs. "Probably should give you a fair warning though. A lot of how things work around here might not exacly be what you'd expect from a vod operation. You'll see a lot of vod deffering to aruetii'vod (Gred term for non-mando member of the Gred Fleet), and not every vod you see will be in full armor. When you only have so much to go around, you figure out ways to make it work. He said, observing to see how Veyla would react to that. His own judgement call on how well he thought this would go.

Veyla Krinn Veyla Krinn
 
Veyla did not answer him right away.

She stood where she was, taking in the gutted YV-666 with the same careful attention she gave to people. The way the old slaver markings were being sanded down rather than simply painted over, the exposed ribs of the hull under inspection, the methodical patience of someone who intended to reuse rather than discard. It told her more about Clan Gred than a banner or a war chant ever could.

When she finally turned her gaze back to Mig, her posture remained relaxed, her hands loose at her sides, her helmet still clipped to her belt. Her expression held no judgment, only a quiet steadiness earned the hard way.

"I've been away from Mandalorian life for a long time," she said evenly. "Long enough that I don't pretend I know the right way anymore, if I ever did."

Her eyes flicked briefly toward the fleet around them. Mixed silhouettes, different armor states, aruetii moving with purpose instead of deference born from fear. Not chaos. Not disorder. Just adaptation.

"Clan Kryze raised me on stories," she continued, voice calm, unembellished. "But stories don't teach you how to survive when the galaxy strips everything else away. You learn that by doing what you must, with who you have."

She met his eyes fully now, open and honest rather than defensive.

"How you run your clan is your responsibility, not mine to judge. I wasn't here when you built this. I wasn't here when you had to decide who mattered enough to keep alive."

A beat.

"I'm not here to tell you how Mandalorians should be," Veyla said quietly. "I'm here because I want to learn how you are."

Her gaze returned to the half-stripped freighter, to the work in progress rather than the past it carried.

"If Clan Gred survives by building differently, thinking differently, trusting differently, then that's knowledge worth earning."

She inclined her head to him, not in submission, but in respect.

"So set the expectations you need. I'll meet them."

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 
Alor of Clan Gred, Mando'ad'jetii
Mig couldn't help but smile at the response. So she was willing to learn. Good. That meant Veyla would fit in just fine as she learned a few things. He looked back at the YV as one of the engineers was checking the drives.

"Alright, than this old girl here will be lesson one." He said, looking over at the ship being broken apart and examined. "After the Sith attacked, we were admittedly sent running. No honor in getting everyone killed just to never back down from a fight. So a lot of our early ways to survive out in the black was stuff like this. We stripped the weapons from our last assault frigates, converted those to cargo and farming vessels to get some fresh food in there. We might've already known our way around a ship, but it took picking up folks that lived out here longer to really thrive. Spacers. Smugglers. Folks who spent their lives out here longer than most. And the Sith left no shortage of folks joining up for safety." Mig took a breath as he looked smirking a bit as he thought back. "Finding ways to adapted became king. Most of our larger ships have a Central AI at this point. Less crew needs so more space for people. Flak covers a lot more ships than stronger shields. Really any way to protect and serve the fleet better. This one here's on the doctet to be turned into a picket ship to keep some of the home ships safer.

Mig realized that might've been a bit long winded, chuckling a little. He sounded like his old man trying to teach him to use to Force. He looked back at Veyla, sighing to himself.

"Guess I really am getting old. But, point is we had to adapt or die trying. Including some things a few vod might would question." Mig would then remove one of his shoulder plates, tossing it to Veyla. She might notice it was lighter than expected, even for the lighter beskar'gam Mig wore. "So... what can you tell about that armor?"

Veyla Krinn Veyla Krinn
 
Veyla caught the shoulder plate easily, the motion smooth and instinctive, and her brow lifted just slightly at how little resistance there was when it landed in her hand. She turned it once, then again, thumb tracing the edge, the mounting points, the subtle scoring that spoke of use rather than display. She did not rush her answer. She never did when metal was involved.

"You are not old," she said first, quietly, without humor, as if correcting a premise rather than offering comfort. "You are practiced."

Her gaze dropped back to the plate. She balanced it on her palm, feeling its weight distribution, then shifted her grip to test how it would sit against the arm in motion.

"This is beskar, but not stubborn beskar," Veyla continued. "It has been thinned deliberately, layered rather than forged as a single uncompromising slab. You traded raw stopping power for endurance, mobility, and reduced fatigue. Someone wearing this is meant to keep moving, not stand and take a hit out of pride."

She ran her fingers along the interior, noting the fittings.

"The mounts are reinforced where strain accumulates, not where tradition says they should be," she added. "Which tells me this was redesigned after real damage, not theory. Probably to compensate for repeated micro-impacts, debris, or flak rather than direct blade or bolt strikes."

Her eyes lifted to him briefly, thoughtful, approving.

"And it is lighter than it should be for its profile," she said. "Which means composite support, or internal lattice work. Enough beskar to matter. Enough space left to let the rest of the suit do its job."

She turned the plate one last time, then held it out to him, not tossing it back, offering it with care.

"This is armor built by a people who accepted that survival is not cowardice," Veyla said. "It is continuity. You adapted your forge to the reality you were given, not the one you wished for."

A faint, wry curve touched her mouth.

"Clan Kryze taught me that beskar is not sacred because it never changes," she went on. "It is sacred because it endures being changed and still protects its people."

Her eyes met Mig's, steady, open.

"So if this is lesson one," she finished, "then I am exactly where I should be. Show me what you questioned. Those are usually the parts worth learning."

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 
Alor of Clan Gred, Mando'ad'jetii
Mig smirked, taking the plate back. “Alusteel core. We call it Alu’skar plating. Forge the Alusteel, then electroplate the Beskar onto the surface. Little tradition, and a little survival. We didn’t have much to go around, so we had a lot of replacements over time.” He said. He then looked at Veyla.

“You’re not wrong about survival though. Meant we had to be willing to learn too. Most our ships at this point, even the big ones like the Kad, have been updated and reworked enough times saying they’re the same class is a formality.” He admitted, lookout out of the hanger as a ship drifted by. He thought about what to explain next, how they planned and built things. So he took a breath.

“Then let’s go to one of the first major questions. What’s important when all you have is a banged up home fleet, a more powerful foe where you use to think it was safe, and a seemingly growing number of civilian ships deciding your a good bet to be around? I know I sort of mentioned this, but I want to see what you’d do.” It sounded almost like he was train the force sensitive kids honestly, but it was important. Even with Veyla here to learn Mig needed to know how she thought too. Plus, it was a chance to learn by discussing pros and cons too.

Veyla Krinn Veyla Krinn
 
Veyla turned the shoulder plate in her hands once more before giving it back, not reluctantly, but with the care of someone who respected the thought behind it rather than the material itself. She listened to Mig without interrupting, her attention steady, absorbing not just the words but the logic beneath them. When he finished and posed the question, she did not answer immediately. Instead, she let the moment breathe, eyes drifting briefly toward the open hangar and the slow, purposeful movement of ships that were more home than hardware.

When she finally spoke, her voice was calm and measured, shaped by reflection rather than instinct.

"The first thing that matters," she said slowly, "is acknowledging that you are no longer building only for war."

She shifted her weight slightly, folding her arms not defensively, but thoughtfully, as if organizing the pieces of the problem in front of her.

"When your fleet stops being just warriors and starts carrying families, laborers, medics, farmers, people who cannot afford to lose a ship because it is also their home, your priorities change whether you want them to or not," Veyla continued. "Survivability stops being about winning engagements and starts being about endurance. Redundancy. Repairability. The ability to keep moving even when something breaks."

Her gaze returned to Mig, steady and open, not challenging him, but meeting him where he stood.

"Against a stronger foe, you do not try to outmatch them head-on. You outlast them," she said. "That means systems that fail gracefully instead of catastrophically. Armor that can be replaced in sections instead of whole plates. Weapons that are good enough, reliable enough, and common enough that losing one does not cripple the fleet."

She paused, then added, more quietly,

"And when civilians choose you as shelter, you owe them predictability. Clear lanes. Defensive screens that discourage pursuit rather than invite escalation. The kind of strength that says 'we are not worth the cost,' not 'come test us.'"

Veyla tilted her head slightly, a faint, thoughtful smile touching her mouth.

"So if it were me," she said, "I would build for continuity before dominance. Protection before pride. Flexibility before purity. Tradition still matters, but only if it keeps people alive long enough to remember it."

She met Mig's eyes again, unflinching, sincere.

"That is how I would start," she finished. "Then I would listen to the people who live with the consequences and let the design evolve from there."

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 
Alor of Clan Gred, Mando'ad'jetii
Mig smiled a bit, nodding. She was a smart one. “Yeah. We ended up running for Silver space. Not necessarily most vod’s first choice, but I was good at making friends.” He said, checking Veyla’s reaction. Never knew what another Mando would think of Jedi, but it was the times.

“We still had to scrap a few ships, but it did change our ships. Even our heaviest have more space than crew requirements. Ionic shields started to become a standard edition too. Not just for ion weapons, or protecting central ai and droid, but we could slip some of our ships into storms if needed.” He though about everything for a moment, pulling out a holodisc to show her a few ships, maybe even some of the older Star destroyers she might have seen flying in. A Lucrehulk made into a floating home. A shipyard made mobile, and how fighters even changed over time.

“Wasn’t always the easy choice. Sometimes hanging back. Being safe. But at the end of the day, we outlasted that Sith empire. And some traditions were left by the way side.” He showed the odd sword/blaster he always had.

“Great when you’re worried about skill above all. Not so much for practicality. Most Gred don’t have these anymore, let alone the rest of the fleet. Have to know when to let go too sometimes.” Mig would seem heavier as he said this. In many ways he and his clan had left a lot behind to survive all the way out in space. He wouldn’t change it, but he was also left with as many questions as Veyla had at times too.

Veyla Krinn Veyla Krinn
 
Veyla took her time before answering.

She watched the holodisc projections as they shifted and rotated between them, the refitted warships and converted carriers, the mobile shipyards and layered defenses telling their story far more clearly than any speech ever could. Survival made visible. Adaptation rendered in metal and circuitry. A culture that had learned, painfully and deliberately, how to bend without breaking.

When Mig finished, when the weight in his voice finally settled into the space between them, she reached out and gently tapped the edge of the holodisc with two fingers, freezing the image of the Lucrehulk-home in place.

Her expression was thoughtful. Not judgmental. Not nostalgic. Honest.

"You didn't abandon your traditions," she said quietly. "You translated them." Her eyes lifted to his. "There's a difference." She leaned back slightly against a crate, folding her arms loosely, posture relaxed but engaged.

"Protecting your people. Keeping them fed. Giving them somewhere to sleep that isn't a battlefield. Teaching them how to survive when the galaxy turns hostile." A small, rueful smile touched her mouth. "That's Mandalorian as it gets."

Her gaze drifted to the odd sword-blaster in his hand, lingering there for a moment before returning to his face. "Relics are powerful," Veyla continued. "They remind us who we were. But they're not who we're supposed to die for." She let that settle.

"Clan Kryze lost a lot too," she added softly. "Wars. Exiles. Rebuilding. Starting over more times than anyone likes to admit. There are things my people used to swear by that don't make sense anymore either." Her tone wasn't bitter. Just real. "Letting go doesn't mean forgetting," she said. "It means choosing your people over your pride."

Veyla tilted her head slightly, studying him now, not as a teacher, not as a student, but as a fellow Mandalorian who had carried his clan through fire. "You kept them alive," she finished. "Through Sith. Through exile. Through scarcity. Through doubt." A quiet certainty entered her voice. "That answers every question that matters."

Then, more gently: "So tell me," Veyla asked, "what's the next thing you're afraid of losing?" Not as a challenge. As an invitation.

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 
Alor of Clan Gred, Mando'ad'jetii
Mig smiled a bit. It was good to hear it from an outside perspective. He thought for a moment as Veyla asked her question though. How to really answer that. There was question.

“You got a good head on your shoulders ad (kid).” He started, then looked out at the fleet.

“At this point. It would honestly just be this. This fleet, the people in it. Been a long time since Gred’s cared too much what the other clans thought of us, so ironically respect wouldn’t be one. But this…. I don’t we could recreate this if we tried.

Mig looked out at the people working on deck. A fighter group being a patrol rotation. A few shouts about some unexpected find in a ship being checked over. He may have been born and raised on Concord Dawn, but this…. It was home now. What he wanted to protect. Every Mandalorian and Spacer that made up the people in the fleet.

“With any luck from the Manda… it’ll be here well after I’m gone.”

Veyla Krinn Veyla Krinn
 
Veyla remained quiet for a long moment after Mig finished, her gaze drifting away from him to track the slow, rhythmic pulse of the fleet. Out there, among the scattered hulls and the silhouettes of drifting figures, was the living heart of something she hadn't expected to find in the cold reaches of space. The low, omnipresent hum of engines, the sharp clang of metal on metal from distant repair bays, and the steady murmur of voices all bled together into a symphony of purpose that felt profoundly real, not the polished, brittle ceremony of the high houses she remembered, but something hard-won and earned in the dirt.

She folded her arms loosely over her chest, her posture shifting into something thoughtful rather than guarded, as a small, almost rueful smile tugged at the corner of her mouth.

"Funny thing," she said softly, her voice barely rising above the ambient drone of the deck. "Most clans spend their entire lives chasing the shadow of respect. They obsess over the height of their banners, the approval of the traditionalists, and making sure their names take up enough space in the history books to justify their pride."

Her eyes returned to him then, clear and steady, searching his face with a new sense of gravity.

"But you? You've built something that doesn't need any of those crutches to stand."

She gestured lightly toward the deck below, a sprawling, chaotic, and beautiful map of life where patrols rotated with clockwork efficiency, and engineers argued passionately over salvaged parts. It was a tapestry of Mandalorians and spacers moving in a shared orbit without a hint of hesitation or the friction of old blood-feuds.

"This right here?" Veyla continued, her voice gaining a quiet, resonant weight. "This is aliit in its truest, most raw form. It's not just about who your parents were or the Beskar you inherited. It's about the choice. People choosing to stay when the galaxy gives them every reason to run. Choosing to protect a neighbor who wasn't born under their sigil. Choosing to call this wandering metal graveyard a home."

A shadow of reflection crossed her features, shaped by the years she had spent feeling like a ghost, disconnected from the very culture that was supposed to be her anchor.

"I've been away from Mandalore and its suffocating politics for a long time," she admitted, the confession tasting like ash and honesty. "Long enough that I'd actually stopped believing anything like this could exist without eventually tearing itself apart from the inside out. I expected to find friction here, Mig. I expected to find a lie."

She shook her head faintly, a look of genuine disbelief softening the sharp lines of her face.

"You didn't just adapt to the survival of the fleet," she said, her tone brimming with a quiet sort of awe. "You gave all these people something that was actually worth adapting for. You gave them a reason to be better than their circumstances."

After a beat, her expression shifted again, becoming infinitely more gentle as she looked at the man who had shouldered the weight of it all.

"And if the Manda listens to anyone...if it truly recognizes the spirit of our people...it'll listen to that."

Her lips curved into a small, genuine smile, one that reached her eyes and stayed there.

"For what it's worth, Mig," Veyla said, her voice warm and unwavering, "I don't think this legacy ends with you. Things like this, foundations built on genuine trust and shared sweat, they don't just vanish when the architect moves on. They get carried. They become part of the marrow."

She glanced back out at the vast expanse of the fleet one last time, seeing not just ships, but a future that had already taken root.

"Looks to me like you already made sure of that. Whether you wanted to be a legend or not, you've become the heartbeat of this place."

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 
Alor of Clan Gred, Mando'ad'jetii
Mig admittedly wasn't sure what to think as he heard. It was most just surprising from someone there to learn. To give someone some peace of mind though with what started as a rag-tag group just trying to make it another day in the black... it was something. He took a breath, looking out as a light freighter refitted for patrol slid by. He noticed one of the weapon racks as he walked over, pulling a CRP-01 Rim from the wall as he spoke.

"You know. It's honestly good to hear from someone who isn't from this world. And here I thought you were the one here to learn. Not always easy out here. Glad we made something here though." He said with a smile, rolling the pistol into a grip to pass it to Veyla. "Could say stuff like this was traditions changing." He said it with a bit less concern now. Though he didn't really go into explination. this time though.

"It's strange. You mentioned being away from Madalorian politics for some time now. If you ask me, it's a better way to handle things. It's at least less stressful."

Veyla Krinn Veyla Krinn
 
Veyla accepted the pistol, the weight settling into her palm with a familiar, grounding ease. She turned it once, checking the balance more out of a warrior's instinct than any real scrutiny, before letting her arm drop. The muzzle angled harmlessly toward the deck, yet she didn't let go of it just yet.

Her gaze drifted toward the viewport, tracking a patrol freighter as it slid silently through the black. It was quiet, thankless work. The kind that rarely earned a verse in a song or a mention in a grand speech, but the kind that kept a people alive.

At Mig's comment about her being a student of sorts, a small, knowing smile touched the corner of her mouth. "I was," she admitted softly. "Still am, truth be told." She turned back to him, her expression shifting from idle curiosity to something more thoughtful, more weighted.

"But I'm starting to think learning stops being about gathering information after a certain point," she said, rolling the pistol lightly in her hand to feel the grip settle against her skin. "Sometimes it's more about understanding why something works the way it does."

The concept he'd touched on earlier, the shifting tide of tradition, lingered in the air between them. Her eyes returned to the ships outside, moving in their disciplined, quiet orbits.

"Politics usually tries to shape Mandalore from the top down," she observed after a moment's silence. "Force of will, decrees, bloodlines. But what you've built here… it feels like the opposite."

A faint breath escaped her, a sound bordering on a laugh. "A fleet. A home. People who chose to stay, not because an order was barked at them, but because they wanted to be here."

She turned the weapon in her hand and offered it back to him, grip-first. It was a gesture of respect, devoid of any urgency.

"Sometimes all it takes is a single word to change the entire weight of a room," she said. She let a beat pass, letting the ambient hum of the ship fill the space before she finally spoke. "Alor."

The title sat between them, simple, ancient, and heavy.

"Not the kind that sits in a throne room debating policy and borders," she added, her gaze steady and unwavering. "But the kind people follow because they actually trust where the ship is going."

The small smile returned, warmer this time.

"I came here to learn the mechanics of how this fleet functioned." She gestured lightly with a nod toward the stars outside. "But I think I'm finally starting to learn why it exists at all."

Mig Gred Mig Gred
 

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