Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Mission: Impossible — Nar Shaddaa Shuffle

Kael Virex came back to Nar Shaddaa like someone sliding a dagger into a tuxedo pocket: clean, smiling, and dangerously casual. He'd been gone only long enough to miss the city's newest neon and the way its rain smelled like ozone and credit. He wanted one clean, lavish score — not for money so much as for the story. He grinned and called it, out loud and to nobody, "Mission: Impossible." The laugh that followed was all his.

He found his crew the same way he'd always done things: at the soft edges of places people consider safe. Three, he decided. Small. Agile. — Kael, plus two women who'd already learned how to melt a room's attention and cut a vault's patience.

Talla: satin-voiced, cat-footed, a face made to distract and a brain made to pick pockets before anyone realized they were empty. She flirted like a weapon and aimed it at Kael the instant she met him. He noticed. He pretended not to.

Miri: thin-limbed, furious with codestreams and locks, a techwhisperer who could make a casino's fortress sing like a lullaby. She was all practicalities and blunt knives. Kael respected that.
 
Arq, of course, knew. Kael let him in because he liked the idea of spilling one danger into the one person who could embroider drama into safety. Arq recoiled at the thought of frontline theft. He was dramatic, nurturing, and possessed of every theatrical way to say no without actually slamming a door. He refused to join the team in person — but he agreed to be their eyes and ears from his security office at the Gilded Veil. Arq's voice on Kael's comlink was glitter and static.

"Darling," Arq said, as only Arq could, "this is spectacularly doomed. I will not be seen in a mask. I will, however, die of curiosity if I do not watch. I will shadow you with a thousand screens." He made a small clicking noise like a curtain being drawn. "You owe me a story I can use as choreography."

Kael promised him a show.
 
The casino in question sat like a jewel on top of Nar Shaddaa's more respectable filth — opulent, smug, and guarded by men who preferred muscle to imagination. Its proprietor was a high-rolling man with taste and a private safe: the sort of person who kept his sins locked behind glass and paid other people to forget the key existed.

Kael's plan was elegant: a diversion staged by Talla in the high-roller lounge; Miri slipping a manipulator into the vault's security mesh; Kael himself—effortless, charming, slipping through shadows as if they were his old trenchcoat. Arq's monitors would cover cameras and wink them into benign oblivion. It would be quick, clean, cinematic.

What Kael did not know — not until the night the casino glittered like a second sun and he was three steps from entering the vault — was that the man who owned those sins was Sommer Dai's new boyfriend.

The realization staggered him. It hit him not like a revelation but like a missing step on a cliffside stair. Sommer. His cousin. The thought of her laughing at some empty thrill while sitting across a table from this man felt like a blade of cold air under his ribs.

He should have called it off. He thought about it. For three heartbeats he considered packing his swagger back into his pockets and marching home.

Then Talla kissed his ear — barely a whisper of breath — and the city hummed impatiently for a show.
 

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