Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Like a Bad Penny, She Just Keeps Coming Back


Location: Nar Shaddaa - The Scourhawk

Equipment:
Standard Outfit | Lightsaber | Modified DL-27 | Rucksack


Rheyla mentioned luck again. Now Ace was certain something was about to go wrong. He kept his mouth shut though, better to not try and cause any form of unrest.

Ace followed the Twi'lek into the cargo hold, watching carefully as she handled her business with the Zabrak. That icy demeanor of hers returned, and Ace felt a flutter in his chest. Familiar and unwanted. Great, did he have a thing for women who could kill a room with a stare? Something to unpack when he wasn't babysitting a bounty.

Not even a second after waking up, the Zabrak was flapping his gums again which prompted an eyeroll from the younger man. Rheyla ordered Ace to watch him as she went off to do... whatever it was she needed to do.

"'Kay."

It didn't take long for the Zabrak to try and 'charm' Acier. Clearly, he underestimated him due to his youth. But he was no stranger to silver tongue types like the Zabrak. Ace simply stared at him blankly, blaster pointed at him, saying nothing.

Part of him did feel bad for this man, although he didn't know what he did to deserve the Hutts' anger. The man could very well be in a similar predicament as Acier. The weight of a bounty over a misunderstanding, or something not directly his fault. Ace felt a twinge of guilt for having a hand in this man's fate.

Rheyla would eventually returned, cycler rifle over her shoulder. Ace's gaze then shot over to the Zabrak. Yeah, it had seemed to shut him up.

Holstering his blaster, Ace followed the pair. He allowed Rheyla to lead, walking single file behind both in order to keep a careful eye on the Zabrak. As they made their way through the city streets, Ace couldn't help but feel unclean. Every time he seemed to step on Nar Shaddaa, all two times, he felt the strong need to shower once everything was all said and done.

The bounty kept talking, trying to weasel his way out of this. Ace tuned the Zabrak out completely, his voice fading into white noise against the neon and noise of Nar Shaddaa. Did this guy ever stop talking?


The trio rounded a corner, stepping into a dim side alley pulsing with flickering red signage. The stench of engine coolant was thicker here, tinged with spice smoke and rot.

Ahead was a half-sunken building nestled between stacked cargo crates and collapsed durasteel scaffolding. No signage. No guards. Just a durasteel door with a rusted keypad and the faint, rhythmic thump of bass-heavy music bleeding from somewhere below.

Ace stopped just short of the threshold, gaze sweeping over the alley. No obvious snipers, no sentries. But Nar Shaddaa didn't need obvious. He flexed his fingers slightly, subtly repositioning his blaster.

Rheyla Tann Rheyla Tann
 

The alley dead-ended in front of a heavy durasteel door flanked by two guards that looked like they’d been scraped off the underside of Nar Shaddaa and handed blasters. One wore mismatched armour plates over street leathers, a half-lit cigarra clenched in his teeth. The other had a vibroblade strapped to his thigh and the unmistakable twitchiness of someone who solved problems with violence before asking questions—if at all.

Both stepped forward as the trio approached, weapons not raised but hands very much near the triggers.

“Hold up,” one barked, voice gravel and spice smoke. “This ain’t a walk-in clinic. State your business.”

Rheyla didn’t flinch. She holstered her blaster with deliberate calm, then reached into her jacket and pulled out a bounty puck. With a flick of her thumb, the image of the Zabrak crackled to life—a rotating holo of his grinning face, name, ID tags, and the unmistakable stamp of Gorrga the Hutt’s seal, blinking in red.

“Here to deliver this pain-in-the-ass,” she said flatly. “Alive. Like the listing said.”

The guard leaned in to squint at the holo, then glanced at the real thing. The Zabrak grinned weakly, as if maybe pretending this was all a misunderstanding would somehow help now.

Before either guard could turn to Ace, Rheyla cut in—sharp, controlled. “He’s with me.”

She didn’t give a name. Didn’t give a reason. Just a statement. The kind that left no room for argument. The guards exchanged a glance, then stepped aside without another word. The door rumbled open behind them, parting with a mechanical groan that smelled like oil, heat, and disrepair.

The Zabrak started in again, voice low, urgent. “Listen—this doesn’t have to go down like this, alright? I got options, I got leverage. Just—tell Gorrga I can offer more than creds. I’ve got intel. I know things. Real things. Sparkleboy, back me up here, yeah?”

He got no answer, just a firm nudge forward as Rheyla walked him past the threshold.

Inside, the air was thicker. Hotter. The kind of heat that came from too many bodies packed into too small a space. Neon signs buzzed overhead in languages half the galaxy forgot how to read. Pipes ran along the walls, dripping who-knows-what onto the grime-slick floor.

This wasn’t a palace. It was a hive.

Gorrga’s domain crawled with motion. A marketplace of illicit trade and vice layered in grime and desperation. Spice dealers peddled vials from dented cases. A Gamorrean bouncer was busy dragging out a bloodied human who had apparently lost more than just credits at sabacc. There were dancers, half-dressed and cybernetically enhanced, performing for a crowd too distracted to care. Above them, screens flickered with surveillance feeds—dozens of angles, dozens of rooms, all watching.

Gorrga saw everything.

They moved deeper.

Past the gambling pits, the pleasure dens, the vault-like doors with codes and guards and sounds you didn’t ask about. The corridor sloped downward, subtly, almost imperceptibly—but enough to make you feel like you were descending into something older, deeper, and more dangerous than what lay above.

The further they went, the quieter the crowd became.

The lighting changed, too—shifting from chaotic neon to colder, harsher illumination. Spotlights that didn’t flicker. Shadows that seemed too intentional.

The Zabrak finally shut up.

Rheyla kept walking, unbothered by the increasing pressure in the air. She’d been here before. Maybe not in this exact hall, but in places like it. Where the rules changed, and you didn’t breathe without permission.

Ace could feel it. The Force thickened here—like the walls themselves held grudges. Old ones.

At the end of the hall loomed a set of ornate doors, flanked by heavy guards in more polished armour, faces hidden behind black visors. Each one carried enough firepower to turn the trio into ash before a scream could leave their lungs.

They didn’t speak.

They didn’t need to.

Rheyla stepped forward and raised the puck again. The holo blinked once—Gorrga’s seal pinged—and the doors began to part.

Behind them?

The Hutt waited.

The doors slid open with a hydraulic groan, revealing a wide chamber half-swallowed in shadow. The floor was polished durasteel veined with old bloodstains and burn marks, scuffed by years of violence that no cleaning droid could erase.

Gorrga the Hutt waited in the center of it all—coiled atop a broad, hovering dais that kept him just high enough to look down on anyone entering the room.

He wasn’t as large as Jabba—sleeker by Hutt standards, his body less of a grotesque heap and more of a thick, powerful coil of muscle and layered fat. His skin was a deep, swampy green, marked with gold-tinted ceremonial scarring that shimmered faintly in the light. One yellow eye was cybernetic, whirring quietly as it refocused on the newcomers. The other, real one, blinked slowly with a predator’s calm.

His dais was surrounded by enforcers—two Weequays, a black-plated droid with too many weapons ports, and a Nikto holding an electro-whip like he enjoyed using it. Behind them, lounge cushions and shallow steps led to alcoves where a few bored-looking attendants watched the proceedings with idle interest. Somewhere, deep bass music rumbled through the walls like a heartbeat.

Gorrga’s tail flexed slightly as he leaned forward.

He spoke in Huttese, voice low, rumbling, and slow like boiling oil.

«You bring me something, little hunter?»

Rheyla stepped forward, dragging the Zabrak with her, and let him stumble to his knees before the dais.

She answered in Basic, voice level. “Alive. Like the listing said.”

Gorrga’s cyber-eye clicked as it scanned the bounty, the faint red beam flickering across the Zabrak’s face. The Zabrak, for once, said nothing. His grin was gone. His shoulders tense. Even he knew when to shut up.

Gorrga gave a low chuckle—a sound like sliding stone.

«He stinks of desperation. That’s how I know he’s mine.»

Rheyla didn’t blink. “Then I’ll take my credits.”

Gorrga’s eye rotated toward Ace for a beat, then back to Rheyla.

«You brought… a boy.»

Rheyla didn’t turn. “He’s with me.”

A pause.

Then the Hutt’s eye narrowed—just slightly.

«A pity. Then he is safe. For now.»

The cyber-eye whirred again, focusing entirely on Ace now.

«But curious, this one. New face. Pretty. A touch of danger…» A slow, oozing smile crept across Gorrga’s face. «I could use another like him. Talented strays are always welcome.» The Hutt leaned back, tail flexing.

«Double what I paid for the bounty. Right now. You walk away richer, no questions asked.»

Silence.

The kind that stretched.

Ace might not have even had time to react before Rheyla spoke—flat, sharp, and immediate.

“No deal.” Her voice didn’t rise. Didn’t flinch.

But it cut clean.

Gorrga blinked once. Slowly. The room shifted—guards stiffening, weight settling behind every glance. Rheyla finally turned her head—just slightly—eyes hard and steady beneath her lekku.

“I brought the bounty,” she said. “That was the job. That’s what you get.”

Another beat of silence.

Then—soft, but unmistakable:

“You want to make me an offer again, you better make sure I don’t walk back out of here first.” It wasn’t a threat, not really.

Just fact.

Just Rheyla.

Gorrga’s eye narrowed again—then, surprisingly, the deep, grating rumble of a laugh filled the room. «Hahhh… very well. Loyal, this one. Loyal and sharp.» His tail uncoiled lazily, one thick arm waving toward the enforcer with the datapad.

«Then take your credits, little hunter. And go.»[/i]

He leaned forward again—cybernetic eye glinting. «Before I decide you’re worth more to me in chains, little Twi'lek.»

Rheyla didn’t blink, but Ace felt an unbelievable seething disgust from Rheyla towards Gorrga that she didn't show. She pocketed the datapad. Nodded once. And turned without another word as the slimy, eerie laughter filled the room as Rheyla pulled Ace with her to leave.

The last thing they both heard as the doors closed behind them was the begging of the Zabrak.

 

Location: Nar Shaddaa

Equipment:
Standard Outfit | Lightsaber | Modified DL-27 | Rucksack


Ace followed the others into the alley, boots echoing dully against duracrete as he sized up the two guards. Typical Nar Shaddaa street scum. Barely professional, probably half-high, but still twitchy enough to be dangerous. His eyes lingered on the one with mismatched armor and a cigarra stuck in his teeth.

That one looked at him for a little oo long. Not like he was clocking a stranger. More like… trying to remember where he'd seen his face before. Ace didn't show it, but inside, every nerve lit up. He tilted his head slightly, pretending to glance past the guy - using the motion to subtly scan his gear, his eyes, his body language. There it was. That faint flicker of recognition. The guy knew him. Or thought he did. But nothing was said. Not yet.

Tessk's bounty hung over Ace like a damn cloud.

Rheyla didn't miss a beat. She handled the interaction with her usual brand of effortless authority - cool, concise, in control. When she said, "He's with me," Ace felt a strange beat in his chest. She didn't say his name. Didn't qualify the statement. Just… said it like it was law. He didn't comment, but he remembered it.

When the door opened, the stench hit first. Like Nar Shaddaa had fermented its worst parts and bottled them up inside this place. Ace's nose twitched, but he kept his face neutral. His boots squelched lightly against something unidentifiable on the floor. Gross.

Everything in here felt alive. Not in a good way. The walls pulsed with noise, breath, and something darker... something in the Force. It was like walking into a memory that hated being remembered. As they passed spice dealers and bloody gamblers, Ace kept his eyes moving. He didn't speak, but he clocked every movement, every exit, every blaster. Not because he thought Rheyla needed backup, but because something in this place demanded vigilance. Paranoia wasn't weakness here. It was survival.

The further they descended, the more the noise died. The lighting shifted. The air felt thinner. Like even the walls knew something dangerous was waiting ahead. And then they were in it. That chamber.

Ace didn't need to understand Huttese to feel the weight in the room shift when Gorrga spoke. The Hutt's voice oozed like something slick and ancient. Whatever he said, it wasn't just casual conversation. Ace stood still beside Rheyla, unreadable as his eyes swept the room. He didn't understand the words but he didn't miss the way Gorrga's eye latched onto him, or the way the guards' postures subtly shifted. The Force in here was thick with interest. Focused. Predatory.

He didn't flinch, he wasn't afraid. But his muscles coiled, ready to move. Just in case. Then Rheyla's voice cut through the air. Sharp. Clear. Final. "No deal." He couldn't understand the offer... but from her tone, her tension, and the sudden spike of heat behind her words, he could guess enough.

His gaze flicked to her and his eyes narrowed slightly, jaw tightening. Whatever was on the table, it had to do with him. And she shut it down without pause. The room held its breath for a moment. Then came the awful sound of Gorrga laughing, deep and slimy. Ace wanted to blast that sound off the face of the galaxy.

They turned to leave. Rheyla didn't say anything, just pulled him with her. He followed willingly, and the thick doors began to seal shut behind them. The Zabrak's voice, pleading, called out one last time. Ace didn't turn around. But guilt stirred within him.

The moment the doors sealed shut behind them, he exhaled through his nose. Slow and controlled. Then leaned slightly closer as they walked, voice low.

"Back at the alley. One of the guards - armor guy. I think he recognized me."


He didn't need to explain why that mattered. Rheyla knew about the bounty. He glanced behind them once, just in case. Then he leaned closer to her, voice muttered:

"He didn't say anything, not yet. But I don't like the way he looked at me. Let's get out of here, fast, before someone tries something."

Ace let it hang for a moment before letting out a sigh, lowering his head slightly. He then cast her a sidelong glance, his tone was genuine.

"That Hutt… he was trying to buy me, right? Thanks. For what you said back there. I owe you."

They stepped back into the haze and din of Nar Shaddaa's streets. The Scourhawk loomed ahead through a curtain of smog and flickering neon. That's when Ace heard it again, just faintly. And with it, a sense of dread loomed over him. Somewhere behind them, the buzz of a commlink. Then:

"Got a hit. Think I found that bounty kid. White dreads, freckles - yeah, matches the tag."


Ace froze. He didn't look back. But his voice was cold.

"…We need to get outta here. Now."

Rheyla Tann Rheyla Tann
 

Rheyla didn’t respond right away.

But the change in her was instant.

Her head didn’t turn—but her eyes were suddenly everywhere.

Scanning reflections in flickering display panels. Watching the glint of durasteel in alleys. Marking every shadow that moved in ways they shouldn’t.

Ace’s words—“Armour guy. I think he recognised me.”—ran through her mind again. She sighed, of course.

She should’ve caught it. The look. The too-long stare.

And now?

Now the whisper of danger clung to the back of her neck like static.

She kept walking, steps smooth, precise—one hand casually resting near her blaster. The streets of Nar Shaddaa were always busy. Always loud. But right now, it all felt… louder.

A little too loud.

The buzz of a distant commlink. The flicker of someone tailing too closely behind. The weight of being watched—not just by the usual scavengers and spice dealers, but by eyes with intent.

She didn’t look at Ace. Just muttered, voice quiet and clipped. “Keep moving. Don’t look back.”

It wasn’t just street scum they had to worry about. Not anymore. That front guard had seen Ace. Really seen him. Probably flagged his face and fed it into the local grid—Sparkleboy’s name lighting up in some shady bounty pool before Rheyla even cleared the inner corridor.

And Gorrga?

Gorrga wouldn’t need much of an excuse. She’d refused his offer. Turned him down in front of his people. If the slug decided to make an example of her? He’d do it with a disgusting smile and a full belly. The kind of Hutt who punished defiance just enough to keep his reputation sharp. They turned a corner, and Rheyla took the lead into a narrow path between a shuttered dive bar and a half-collapsed droid chop shop. Smog clung to the air like old grease. It stung the nose. Covered movement. She liked that.

“We’re close,” she murmured. “The Hawk’s two blocks out.”

Then, quieter—without emotion, without apology: “Should’ve left you on the ship.”

Not out of anger. Not even frustration. Just an admission. She’d brought him because she didn’t trust him enough to leave alone with her vessel—and because, like it or not, he was tangled in this now. But that decision? It had just come back to bite her. She flexed her jaw, mind already calculating how many routes they could take back. How fast the Hawk could be powered up. Whether they were being shadowed by freelance scum… or Gorrga’s enforcers.

Nar Shaddaa didn’t care about fairness.

It cared about credits.

And right now, she had a walking bounty next to her in the middle of Hutt territory.

 

Location: Nar Shaddaa

Equipment:
Standard Outfit | Lightsaber | Modified DL-27 | Rucksack

She didn't have to tell him twice. Keep it moving? No looking back? Second nature. Ace walked in line with Rheyla at a good pace, not too obvious that they're trying to get the hell out of dodge, but they weren't strolling either. Ace's eyes shot around, scanning their surroundings for anything out of place or suspicious.​
They were just two blocks away from reaching the Scourhawk. Two blocks too far. They may have been closer, but they weren't out of the thick of it yet. Ace heard Rheyla mutter something about leaving him on the ship. Honestly, he completely agreed.​
"Yeah." he muttered low. It wasn't in a snarky 'told you so' manner' - just resigned.​
And that's when Ace felt it again - that pull, that static hum that didn't come from the streets or the smog or even the Force. It came from being seen. The same way he'd felt back at the door. Back when that guard - the one with the mismatched armor - had held his stare for just a second too long. Not suspicion. Recognition.

Ace didn't turn around. But the hairs on the back of his neck lifted as someone behind them shouted over the street noise:

"There! That's him! Don't let them escape! Move!"


Boots hit the ground behind them followed by the sounds of blaster safeties clicking off. Ace felt that urgr again - the one on Botajef, the one on Denon, the one telling him to move. And he did, Ace lunged toward Rheyla and wrapped his arms around her waist before forcing her to the ground.

A stun bolt soared just milimetres above where they stood. As they fell to the ground, Ace reached for his holster - rolling off Rheyla as soon as they hit the ground. Without thinking, he shot off a blaster bolt into the crowd and heared a cry of pain. Hopefully he hit who he'd meant to. He shot up and held his hand for Rheyla to take before pulling her up.

"Go!" he shouted, already pivoting to cover their flank.

The crowd screamed, scattering as blaster fire lit up the area. Ace ducked low and bolted after Rheyla, weaving between stalls and overturned crates. His heart was hammering. Not from fear, but fury. This bounty was a bane on his life.

Ace glanced over his shoulder. Three figures pushed through the crowd - he wasn't sure if they were Gorrga's enforcers or freelancers. As if it even mattered. Their aim was good, another bolt sizzled past his arm. Ace remembered Rheyla had jet-boots, he pondered for a moment. If they split up, Rheyla could make it back to the ship, get the engines started. Meanwhile Ace could try to lead the others away, then round back to the Scourhawk.

It was risky, but it could work.

"Get to the ship! I'll catch up!"

He saw a narrow stairwell wedged between two shops. No signs, nor lights and probably a deathtrap. But it sloped upward toward the rooftops. He shoved open the gate and barreled up first, taking the steps three at a time. The pounding footfalls below told him he was still being chased. Escaping two groups of bounty hunters in a day wasn't for the weak.

Rheyla Tann Rheyla Tann
 

Rheyla ran.

Boots pounding against ferrocrete, heart clenched in that tight, calculating knot that came with every bad gamble mid-collapse.

She didn’t look back.

Didn’t need to.

Blasterfire lit up the street behind her, red bolts cutting through the smog like angry stars. Civilians screamed, ducking into alleys or diving behind stalls. One bolt seared past her head—too close. She threw herself into a roll, came up in a crouch, and snapped off two return shots without breaking stride. One of the bastards chasing her folded like a kicked droid.

The other kept coming.

Figures.

She vaulted a low crate, skid-slid across spilled fruit, and pivoted around a broken market stall to the left—the Scourhawk’s pad just ahead.

She made it.

Almost.

Gun up, cover firm, breathing tight—but steady. She turned on a heel and fired again. Two shots. Controlled. Sharp. One hit, one didn’t. The second hunter dived for cover, returning fire, but she was already ducking behind a loading crane’s column.

And just like that, she had a moment. A beat.

Sheltered.

Clear.

Alone.

She should start the ship. Power it up. Keep it hot. Buy Ace the time he said he needed. That was the plan, wasn’t it?

But she couldn’t move.

Not yet.

Something itched at the base of her skull—an old, stupid itch that had nothing to do with tactics and everything to do with instinct. The firefight still screamed behind her, but the sounds weren’t as wild anymore. Focused. Targeted. She hadn’t seen Ace since the split. And for all his mouth and flash and blaster—he was still just one karking kid with a bounty on his face and death at his heels.

Her jaw tensed.

She cursed under her breath.

Then she moved.

Rocketboots flared to life with a guttural blast, smoke kicking off the durasteel beneath her. She jetted upward—between rusted support beams, over the shivering roofline of a speeder repair shack—until the rooftops opened in front of her in a blur of haze and motion.

There.

Top of a narrow fire escape.

Ace, sprinting—shoulders forward, gun still in hand, jacket flaring at his sides. His hair was a mess, his breath ragged—but he was still moving, still fighting.

Too many footfalls behind him.

Too damn close.

Rheyla levelled mid-air, twisted her body to absorb the landing, and hit the rooftop hard, knees bent in a practised drop.

“MOVE!” she barked—not at him, but behind him—as she reached for her belt.

The smoke grenade left her fingers before her boots even stopped hissing. It clattered down the stairs and exploded with a sharp phumph, a thick cloud of choking grey swallowing the entire escape route behind him. Shouts followed. Coughing. Swearing.

Rheyla didn’t wait for pleasantries.

She extended her hand toward him, arm out, glove open, palm firm.

“Sparkleboy—let’s go!” The moment he would grab her hand, she would pull him into her firmly, and within a second her rocketboots would flare and send them into the air and towards the street, but almost right by the entrance to the landing pad.

 

Location: Nar Shaddaa

Equipment:
Standard Outfit | Lightsaber | Modified DL-27 | Rucksack


Ace's boots hammered on the rooftop durasteel, lungs burning, the slap of pursuit behind him getting louder and too karking close. His shoulder clipped a vent unit, but he didn't stop. One bad step and he was a memory on the bounty boards. There was no way he was going out this way, not for Tessk.

Blasterfire cracked past his head. Ace threw his blaster past behind his shoulder and returned fire without so much as a glance. A snarl of pain answered shortly after. One of them, at least, had eaten it. He wasn't out of the fire yet, more were still on him of course. It wasn't like they were going to stop and check on their partner.

Another rooftop was ahead. The gap wasn't far either, he'd definitely be able to make it. Ace didn't hesitate, he vaulted across the gap - feet slamming onto the first step just as he heard a familiar voice yell out.

“MOVE!”

Ace barely registered it before the smoke grenade detonated below, a thunderclap followed by a blast of thick, choking grey. The footfalls behind him faltered. Shouts turned to cough, shadows disappeared in haze. And through it all - he saw her. It was Rheyla. She'd come back for him? Again? It didn't matter. She was here, boots smoking and hand outstretched.

Without so much as a thought, Ace reached and grabbed her hand. Their bodies collided mid-step, shoulder to chest, just as her rocketboots ignited with a roar. The lift was brutal and instant, he had no time to even brace himself before, what felt like, all of his internal organs shifting to one side. Wind tore past his ears, his jacket flared like a sail, and somewhere below - a blaster bolt sliced through the smoke. But it was too late.

Ace tightened his grip on her shoulder, the city spinning beneath his boots. Nar Shaddaa looked even uglier from above. Then his gaze shifted to Rheyla.

"Thought I said to get back to the ship?" his tone was soft. He wasn't angry, just maybe still in shock over the fact she had pulled through for him. Again.

He thought to himself, was this what it was like to be able to rely on someone? He and Rheyla weren't friends, their history was rocky. But... strangely, in recent months, she's the only one who'd consistently shown up for him. Ace felt a sensation warm up inside his chest. It was gratitude and something else. Was Ace starting to actually like Rheyla now? Despite everything?

When they would finally hit the ground. Ace stumbled forward, catching his balance just before he face-planted into a stack of fuel canisters. His blaster clattered to the ground beside him. The Scourhawk loomed ahead, just a few more steps.

Ace exhaled sharply, chest rising and falling like he'd just outrun the entire Underworld. Which, technically, he had. He turned toward Rheyla, brushing soot off his sleeve. Awkwardly, he rubbed the back of his neck and offered her a half-smile.

"Remind me to never doubt you again, Bluebell." he said, voice dry, half-serious.

But he was still watching her. Not like before. There was something quieter in his stare now - something unreadable even to himself. He opened his mouth to say more but stopped short, unsure what would even come out.

"You didn't have to come back for me, y'know..." It slipped out before he could stop it, and he regretted it immediately. Ace cleared his throat, eyes flicking away

"Not that I'm complaining," he added quickly, scooping up his blaster and holstering it. "I had it handled. Just… y'know. Eventually."

The lie didn't even sound convincing to himself. A moment of silence hung between them - charged but unspoken. The kind that said more than maybe either of them were ready to unpack right now.

Rheyla Tann Rheyla Tann
 

Rheyla landed hard. Not clean, not elegant—just fast. Her boots scraped the ferrocrete as they hit down just shy of the landing pad’s access gate, smoke still curling off the rocket vents.

Ace stumbled beside her. Of course he did.

She barely had time to check their flank—two more bolts hit the wall behind them, wild and desperate. But it was enough. The rest were peeling back. Or dying. Either way, they had seconds. Not minutes.

Ace turned toward her. Said something. She didn’t even register it at first—her eyes were still scanning rooftops, alley mouths, signs of reinforcements.

Then it hit.

“Remind me to never doubt you again, Bluebell.”

Rheyla’s head snapped toward him like a turret.

"Excuse me?"

Crack.

Her hand lashed out—short, sharp, the back of her glove smacking him square in the shoulder. It wasn’t enough to hurt, but it was enough to jolt him.

“You call me Bluebell again and I swear I’ll shove you out the airlock without asking which planet we’re orbiting.”

She stepped past him, boots heavy, tone flat—but her mouth twitched at the corners. Not a smile. Not quite. Just a crack in the armor.

Ace mumbled something about her not needing to come back.

She didn’t look at him, didn’t pause—but her voice dropped a notch, dry and dismissive in that carefully controlled way she’d perfected:

“Don’t read too much into it, Sparkleboy. You paid me to get you to Ord Mantell—I don’t back out once credits change hands.”

Before he could say anything else, she keyed the Scourhawk’s ramp.

The ship groaned to life, lights flickering on as the ramp hissed open. Rheyla holstered her blaster, eyes still scanning behind them.

“Get your ass inside. We’re not done pissing people off today.”

 

Location: Nar Shaddaa

Equipment:
Standard Outfit | Lightsaber | Modified DL-27 | Rucksack

Ace blinked at the slap to his shoulder, shoulder rolling with the slap. Tender moment over then, if it was even there. Rheyla really hated the nickname. She moved past him and he caught that subtle twitch at the corner of her mouth. Barely there, but ht saw it Ace didn't say anything about it but he held on to it. Something small and sharp in his chest eased, just a little. It gave him the go ahead to say:

"Remember, it stops when you stop with the Sparkleboy."
he fired back, smirking as he followed her toward the Scourhawk.

Then she fired off her cold little disclaimer, telling him not to read too much into it. Ace rolled his eyes, as he hauled ass up the loading ramp. But not before turning back to her.

"Too late." it wasn't sarcastic or snide, just quiet.

He didn't push it. Ace knew better than to pick at things people weren't ready to talk about. He barely understood what he was feeling himself. But there was something there. Between the way she'd pulled him out, the way she never once looked back, and the way his pulse still hadn't settled since.

As the ramp started to close behind them, Ace glanced back one last time, at the pad, at the street, at the shadows twisting through Nar Shaddaa's underbelly. This was twice now she could've left him behind. And twice she didn't. He let the thought sit as the ramp sealed shut.

Ace rushed to the cockpit before strapping himself inside the co-pilot's seat, waiting for Rheyla to whisk the pair to the safety of the stars. Then, it was to Ord Mantell - to safety, to start all over.

Rheyla Tann Rheyla Tann
 

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