Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private O brother, where art thou?


gOUIgu3.png


Naboo
Near Dee'ja Peak

Objective: Search
Shade Shade
Indirect: Sibylla Abrantes Sibylla Abrantes (FYI)

The lake wind moved softly through the broken reeds along the edge of the impact site, stirring ash that should have settled days ago but somehow still refused to rest. Elian Abrantes stood at the perimeter markers the Republic engineers had left behind, their clean white stakes already leaning slightly into the damp Naboo soil as if even they were tired of pretending the investigation was finished. Cassian's ship had come down hard here, too hard for an accident and too precisely for chance, and the silence around the wreckage felt wrong in a way Elian could not explain. Naboo was supposed to be gentle ground, but today it felt like a grave pretending to be a garden.

The hull fragments had already been hauled away, the larger debris cataloged and removed by Intelligence teams who had combed the area with scanners and drones and careful boots that left neat patterns in the grass. They had called it thorough and professional and complete, and Elian had nodded when they told him that because it was easier than arguing with people who believed paperwork meant truth. Cassian did not simply vanish into clean reports and sealed evidence containers, and he did not crash without fighting back, and he did not disappear because he chose to. Someone had taken him, and Elian could feel that certainty settling into his bones like cold iron.

He crouched near the shallow scar where the ship's forward section had carved into the earth before breaking apart, running his gloved fingers through soil that had already been disturbed too many times by strangers pretending to care. The ground still held faint impressions beneath the official tracks, small inconsistencies that scanners ignored but instinct noticed, and Elian trusted instinct more than any Republic sweep. Cassian had been ambushed here, cornered here, and dragged away from here by people who expected no one important to come looking after the noise died down.

For a moment the thought crept in uninvited, ugly and persistent, carrying Aurelian's voice with it like a bruise that never quite faded. Maybe Cassian really had been exactly what Aurelian said he was, reckless and useless and destined to disappear into the kind of trouble no one would come look. Elian's jaw tightened as he stared across the quiet lakeshore, and he forced the thought out of his head before it could settle anywhere permanent.

He had learned about the crash almost a week after it happened, first from Sibylla and then from news reports as he wnet back to see them.. By the time he understood what he was seeing, reading, the search teams had already come and gone, the official conclusions already written, and his siblings already grieving in their own separate ways without him. He knew that should have mattered more to him than it did right now, but grief had a way of narrowing the world until only one thing remained visible. Right now the only thing that mattered was Cassian.


Elian rose slowly and looked out across the water again, studying the shoreline as if the land itself might finally decide to speak. Intelligence believed there was nothing left here worth finding, but Intelligence had not grown up with Cassian and they had not spent years learning how often he survived situations he never should have walked away from. Somewhere between the broken reeds and the quiet surface of the lake, something had been missed. Elian intended to find it, even if it meant tearing the truth out of the ground himself.

Unfortunatley there was only so much a one armed eighteen year old kid could do.

Yes, that one arm issue needed to get fixed in a hurry.

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The wind shifted with a subtle grace, barely enough to register against the lake's constant breath, yet it carried a clinical sharpness that did not belong to the hollow quiet the Republic had left behind. Shade did not approach with any sound that would announce her presence; instead, she seemed to manifest from the shadows of the shoreline itself. One moment, Elian stood alone amid the remnants of a lie dressed as an investigation; the next, she was simply there. She took her place a few paces behind and to his left, her presence radiating the same controlled, deliberate gravity that defined her every movement.

Her gaze swept across the site with practiced efficiency, bypassing Elian initially to dissect the scene. She noted the precise placement of markers, the specific way the soil had been disturbed, and the suspicious pattern of removal that spoke of a sanitized crime scene rather than a raw impact. After a long, heavy pause, she finally spoke.

"They cleared it too cleanly, Elian," she said, her voice low and even, cutting through the silence without shattering it. "It is evident that they have already decided what this story was supposed to be before they even arrived to tell it."

Only then did her attention shift toward him. It wasn't a look of pity, but one of profound alignment, her focus remaining partially anchored to the ground as if she were reading the truth written in the dirt.

"Resignation, departure, civilian movement, and then a convenient disappearance," she continued, tilting her head with precise calculation. "That narrative is not designed for accuracy; it is designed for containment. It is a way to wrap a tragedy in enough bureaucracy to make people stop asking questions."

She took a few steps forward, her boots finding the gaps in the sand where the official investigators had failed to tread. As she crouched near the scar he had been studying, she reached out with a gloved hand, pressing lightly into the soil to feel the structure beneath the surface.

"This is not how a crash site looks when it is simply processed by engineers," she observed, her voice softening just enough to acknowledge his own grim conclusions. "It is how a site looks when something vital is removed before the official history can be written. You are correct to trust your instincts here. He did not go down without resistance, and he certainly did not leave this place by his own choice."

She rose with a fluid, smooth motion, her posture settling into a vigilant stillness as she mapped out the extraction vectors along the shoreline.

"This entire sequence was controlled, which means it was meticulously planned, and planned operations always leave patterns for those who know how to look," she said, finally meeting his eyes with a gaze that was steady and unbreakable. "We will find them, Elian. That is not a promise born of hope, but a conclusion based on the trail they think they erased."

Her gaze flicked briefly to his arm, a glance that was purely analytical. Acknowledging the challenge without letting it define him.

"You do not need to exhaust yourself by trying to tear the truth out of the ground with force," she added, her tone carrying a rare, quiet thread of support. "You only need to read what they were too arrogant to realize they left behind. Stay with me, and we will start exactly where their story begins to break."

Elian Abrantes Elian Abrantes
 

gOUIgu3.png


Naboo
Dee'ja Peak

Objective - Search
Shade Shade
Indirect: Sibylla Abrantes Sibylla Abrantes

"They cleared it too cleanly, Elian," she said, her voice low and even, cutting through the silence without shattering it. "It is evident that they have already decided what this story was supposed to be before they even arrived to tell it."
"Resignation, departure, civilian movement, and then a convenient disappearance," she continued, tilting her head with precise calculation. "That narrative is not designed for accuracy; it is designed for containment. It is a way to wrap a tragedy in enough bureaucracy to make people stop asking questions."

Elian turned as he faced Shade, looking at her briefly with frown on his face. "What are you saying? Are you saying Intelligence and the Military planned this, covered it up?" Elian let out a small sigh.

"Cassian has given his life in service of this planet. I do not believe they would have just covered it up to prevent questions from being answered." Elian kicked at the dirt before he shook his head and knelt down.

"My brother wasn't perfect, but they wouldn't toss him aside like. Gods forbid they were involved, who knows who else might be in on it. Aurelian might have been one of them. Everyone knows the hatred that he harbored for him, hell he tried to kill him once."

Elian's mind was racing in several different directions right now, all didn't make sense. But he was angry right now, anger usually amplied everything. Especially when family was invovled.

"When was the last time you saw him?"

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Shade did not interrupt him, allowing the anger to run its course while she watched him with a steadiness that neither challenged his frustration nor yielded to it. There was no tension in her posture and no visible reaction to the names he invoked or the volatile direction his thoughts threatened to spiral; instead, she simply remained present, giving him the necessary space to reach the edge of his outburst before she attempted to speak.

When she finally did, her voice was low and even, carrying none of the jagged sharpness that had defined his own.

"No," she said quietly, the single word sounding firm without being forced. "That is not what I am saying at all."

She shifted slightly, a subtle adjustment that brought her a fraction closer. It was not enough to crowd him, but sufficient to ensure her presence became something grounding rather than distant. Her gaze held his, remaining steady and clear as she bridged the gap between them.

"They did not do this to him," she continued, her tone measured and deliberate, "but they are absolutely controlling every detail of what happens in the aftermath."

Her eyes moved briefly across the site, taking in the clinical placement of the markers, the carefully disturbed earth, and the conspicuous absence of anything left behind that might speak too loudly to the public, before her focus returned to him.

"Because of exactly who he is and the weight his name carries, they simply cannot afford not to manage the situation," she explained, her voice carrying an understanding not just of military systems, but of the precarious position Cassian had earned through years of dedicated service. "If this site is left exposed without immediate answers, his disappearance becomes something far larger and more dangerous than a missing person case; it becomes a source of systemic uncertainty that raises questions they are not yet prepared to answer."

A faint pause followed, not out of hesitation, but from a deliberate care in how she chose to frame the reality of their situation.

"So they secure the perimeter, they remove every scrap of physical evidence they can study in a lab, and they limit what is seen by the public until they truly understand the nature of what they are dealing with," she said, tilting her head slightly while her gaze never left his face. "That is not them discarding him or treating him as expendable, Elian; it is them desperately trying to maintain a grip on a situation that is rapidly spinning out of their comprehension."

There was something quieter in her tone now, a shift that wasn't a softening of her resolve, but a sharpening of her intent. Her eyes dropped briefly to the ground between them, tracing the same subtle inconsistencies he had noticed earlier, before lifting to meet his again.

"But they will inevitably miss things because they are looking for evidence that fits a pre-written report, rather than searching for the small, jagged pieces of the truth that do not belong in their narrative," she added, her voice dropping to a near whisper.

When he asked his question, there was the smallest shift in her expression. Nothing that was visible to a casual observer, but present in the sudden, absolute stillness of her gaze.

"I saw him not long before this happened," she answered, the words simple but heavy with a shared history. "And in that moment, he was exactly where he intended to be."

A brief pause stretched between them, thick with the weight of the admission.

"He was with me."

She offered no further elaboration or empty comfort, letting the truth stand as an immovable fact in the center of the clearing.

"He was not preparing to disappear or seeking an exit from his life, which means this entire event was forced upon him by an outside hand," she continued, her voice returning to that quiet, controlled certainty that acted as its own kind of armor. "And whoever orchestrated this operation clearly expected that a clean site and a sanitized report would be enough to bury the trail forever."

She made a slight, dismissive motion of her hand toward the cleared impact site, her eyes hardening with a cold, focused light.

"They are about to discover that it is not nearly enough to stop us from finding the truth."

Elian Abrantes Elian Abrantes
 

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