Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private old friends and older ruins

Eadu: Old Imperial Outpost Ruins


Eadu did not whisper.
It screamed.


The storm tore across the cliffs like something alive, rain slamming sideways against stone and durasteel with enough force to sting exposed skin. Thunder rolled so deep it felt less like sound and more like pressure inside the bones. Even long after the Empire had abandoned this place, the planet remained what it always had been. violent, merciless, unwelcoming.


The Vigo-77 sat wedged inside an old cliffside hangar, half swallowed by shadow and time. Rust had eaten into the blast doors. The Imperial insignia that once marked the entrance was little more than a ghostly outline beneath corrosion and lichen. Whatever had once mattered here had long since rotted away.


Or so most people thought.
Rynar didn't believe in empty ruins.


He stepped through the skeletal frame of what had once been a reinforced blast corridor, boots scraping over shattered transparisteel and metal warped from age and bombardment. Water streamed down through cracks in the ceiling, tracing old support beams like veins. Somewhere deeper in the structure, something mechanical groaned. not alive, but not entirely dead either.


Cupcake padded behind him, cautious but steady.
"Tip better be good," Rynar muttered under his breath, though there was no real doubt in his tone. He'd chased worse leads.
The corridor opened into a larger chamber and he stopped.


A section of the roof had collapsed entirely, leaving a jagged mouth open to the storm above. Rain poured through it in sheets, turning the chamber into a churning basin. What had once been a control floor was now a waist-deep pool of dark water stretching wall to wall.


And it wasn't still.
Faint pulses shimmered beneath the surface, thin blue arcs dancing across the flooded floor like veins of lightning trapped underwater. Somewhere, impossibly, the outpost still carried power.
A hanging cable sparked where it dipped into the pool.
The hum wasn't loud, but it was there. A low, vibrating tension in the air.


Across the chamber, half-submerged under a collapsed gantry, a bank of intact equipment clung stubbornly to life. Faint indicator lights blinked against the gloom. Military-grade processors. Power regulators. Maybe even shield capacitors if he was lucky.


High value.
High risk.
Another crack of lightning illuminated the entire room in blinding white for half a second, and in that flash, the water looked endless.


Rynar crouched at the edge, picking up a broken length of metal conduit. He tossed it lightly toward the surface.
The moment it touched, blue energy snapped violently outward.
The smell of ozone filled the air.

"…Yeah," he murmured. "That's not happening."


Wind screamed down through the broken ceiling, rain hammering his shoulders. He scanned the walls, collapsed scaffolding, dangling cable lines, exposed beams slick with runoff. Maybe he could climb. Maybe he could cut the power, if the grid hadn't fused itself into some nightmare loop decades ago.


He exhaled slowly, eyes narrowing as he traced potential routes.
"We go across smart," he said, more to himself than Cupcake. "Or we don't go at all."


Thunder rolled again, closer this time.
And for just a moment, beneath the storm and the hum of old Imperial systems refusing to die…
…it almost felt like the ruin was watching him decide.

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The gravel of the Eadu cliffside bites into my boots as I lose your footing, the treacherous, rain-slicked shale giving way beneath. I slide a good twenty feet. I hit a jagged outcrop, dropping three feet through the air before hitting the landing pad near the hangar bay with a heavy thud. I tuck my chin and roll, absorbing the impact and springing back onto my feet in one fluid motion.

Slowly standing I wipe away the relentless rain from your visor. The HUD flickers for a second, struggling with the foggy visibility Eadu is famous for. I reach back, adjusting the heavy strap of my cycler rifle to ensure the rifle won't snag on anything when I go inside.

"The contact said there might be some good stuff here," I mutter, I look up at the massive, yawning maw of the Imperial hangar, a concrete scar carved directly into the mountain. "I swear, if he's lying, I'm throwing a vibro-knife at him... and out of all the places, it had to be Eadu."

The hangar is a graveyard of forgotten ambition. Beams of pale light cut through holes in the ceiling, illuminating dust motes and the skeletons of rusted transport shuttles. I move deeper into the gloom, my boots echoing softly on the floor. I decide to sift through a pile of overturned supply crates, kicking aside rotted synth-mesh and useless pieces of rusted strut-work. Then I see a blue flash from a corridor and a buzzing noise. I pull out my Westar-35's and slowly walk to the corridor trying to be as quiet as I can but I knock over a box I couldn't see. "Shit..."
 
The crash carried through the ruin like a blaster shot.
Metal scraping. A crate tipping. A muttered curse swallowed by thunder.
Rynar froze.
Every muscle locked. Every instinct sharpened.
The storm outside howled, but that sound had not been the storm.

He moved without hesitation, rifle coming up in one smooth motion, stock settling into his shoulder as naturally as breath. His boots barely made a sound as he shifted into the corridor's shadow, eyes scanning the angles where someone could take cover.

Another flicker of blue light reflected across wet durasteel.
Not alone.


His tongue clicked softly against his teeth. a sharp, practiced sound.
"Go," he murmured.
Cupcake needed no further instruction.

The nexu slipped forward low and silent, muscles coiled beneath slick fur, tail cutting through the damp air as she vanished around the corridor bend. Rynar followed slower, controlled, rifle trained ahead, ready for scavengers… pirates… bounty hunters chasing the same tip.


Then...
A sound.
Not a snarl.

Not a strike.
A chirrup.
High. Almost… pleased.
Rynar frowned.


Cupcake emerged into view again, but not in attack posture. Instead she bounded forward, an unmistakable excited rumble vibrating from her chest, tail lashing in wide arcs as she rushed past something just out of sight.


Rynar pivoted the corner, rifle up...
...and stopped.
Time hit a wall.


The rain through the broken ceiling, the hum of dying Imperial power, the storm outside, all of it dulled to a distant haze.

"…No way."
He lowered the rifle slowly, disbelief washing across his features as recognition hit.

"Nianuke?"
The name left him like a breath he hadn't realized he'd been holding.
He didn't hesitate.


The rifle dropped to its sling as he closed the distance in long strides, laughter breaking from him, real laughter, unguarded and rough around the edges.
"What are you doing on Eadu?" He demanded, the voice was incredulous and warm all at once.
He caught her up without thinking, lifting her clean off the ground in a tight, rain-soaked embrace, spinning her once despite the slick floor beneath them.

"I thought you were halfway across the Outer Rim..."

He set her down but didn't step back, hands still on her shoulders like he needed to confirm she was real.
"Of all the cursed, storm-choked rocks in the galaxy…"
A grin tugged at his mouth, shaking his head in disbelief.
"You show up here?"


Behind them, lightning flashed through the broken ceiling, illuminating rusted hulls and the skeletal remains of Imperial arrogance, but suddenly the ruin didn't feel nearly as cold.

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The heavy, oppressive weight of the Eadu atmosphere seems to lift, replaced by a warmth that has no business existing in a derelict Imperial graveyard.
"I'm tracking a specialized nav-computer from a downed Lambda-class shuttle," I say, the words coming easier now that the adrenaline has peaked and passed. My grin widens as Cupcake leans into my touch with a low, rumbling purr that vibrates through the floorplates. "Hey Cupcake... you mess-and-a-half. Still keeping Rynar out of trouble?"

I straighten up, my expression shifting from Cupcake to Rynar, a playful but pointed edge returning to my voice.
"But seriously, Rynar... what are you doing here?"

Before he can answer, I punch his shoulder plate. The thrum of the metal rings out, a familiar, solid sound that punctuates my frustration.
"And why did you never contact me... it's been too long, Rynar. Way too long."

A sigh escapes me, followed by a soft, breathless laugh.
 
The punch lands.
Solid.
Familiar.
Rynar doesn't move at first.
He just looks at her.


The storm crashes through the broken ceiling, rain streaking down his armor, thunder rolling heavy across the cliffside. For a second, the ruin feels smaller, quieter.
"…I know," he says.
No deflection this time.

"When the Diarchy grabbed me, it happened fast. I was alone."

His jaw tightens slightly.
"Cupcake wasn't with me. She was with Korda."
At the nexu's name, his hand absently brushes along her shoulder, grounding himself in the solid warmth of her presence.
"They kept me breathing," he continues evenly. "Not out of kindness."


A flicker of something passes behind his eyes, memory he doesn't unpack.

"Dean pulled me out."
That lands heavier.

"She burned her ties with them to do it."
There's no joke in his voice now. Just respect.
"She didn't have to."

Rainwater drips from his brow as he exhales slowly.
"I didn't contact you because I couldn't. And when I finally could… I was putting pieces back together."
A beat.
Then, because he is still Rynar, the corner of his mouth tilts upward.

"And yeah," he adds more lightly, nudging the tension back just enough, "the same Dean is now apparently planning to make sure I live long enough to become her husband."

He lifts a brow slightly.
"So technically, I've got more than Cupcake keeping me in line these days."
Cupcake lets out a low, approving rumble as if on cue.

Rynar gestures toward the flickering corridor again, pulling the conversation forward before it can sink too deep.

"I got tipped about high-grade regulators and shield capacitors still intact in here. Stuff worth risking a little electrocution."
Blue arcs crackle across the flooded floor again.

"And if you're tracking a Lambda nav-computer…" His expression sharpens. "That shuttle's last logs could be gold. Flight paths. Hidden coordinates. Maybe even Diarchy-linked routes if they repurposed old Imperial channels."

He looks back at her fully now.

"So unless you want to stand here punching my armor for old times' sake…"
A slow grin spreads.
"…we've got ghosts to chase."

Thunder detonates overhead.
The ruin hums.
And the mission, and whatever unresolved things sit between them, waits just ahead.

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