Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Private Orphans of Nar Shadda

Steam hisses from a ruptured vent, curling around Riven's boots, dampening the hem of his coat. Neon spills down the walls in sickly colors that never agree with each other. Pink arguing with green. Blue bleeding into rust. Nar Shaddaa doesn't bother pretending to be pretty where it doesn't get paid to be.

Riven's hands shake.

He tells himself it's the cold. Or the hunger. Or the way the streetlight flickers like it's judging him. It's easier than admitting he dosed too early and too hard.

"Where is he?" he snaps, fingers digging into his pockets, searching for a stim he knows isn't there.
 
Kaia doesn't answer right away. That's always how it starts.

She leans against the wall instead, arms crossed, posture relaxed in a way that makes him itch. Like she's not stuck in the same filth, like she hasn't slept in a maintenance shaft two levels down.

"You're pacing," she says. Calm. Always calm. "You look desperate."
 
The alley shifts. Footsteps somewhere above. A speeder screaming past on a lower level. Nar Shaddaa listening, always listening.

Kaia's eyes flick up, then back to him. "You're already high."
 
Riven is unraveling. Again.

Kaia clocks it in the way his shoulders twitch, the way his gaze keeps snagging on nothing. She knows his tells better than her own. Knows when he's about to explode or disappear.

She doesn't move closer. That's a mistake she stopped making last year.

"He's late," she says, keeping her voice low. "That doesn't mean he's not coming."
 
That stings. He knows it does.

Kaia exhales slowly through her nose, grounding herself. She can smell the alley. Oil. Rot. Burnt circuitry. The fire crawls up her spine uninvited, a memory with teeth. She presses her back harder to the wall like it might keep the past from reaching her.

"I'm trying to keep us alive," she says. "Both of us."
 
"You didn't have to," she replies. "Mom didn't either."

The word hangs between them, glowing hot.

For a moment, she thinks he might hit something. Her. The wall. Himself. Instead, he laughs again, too loud, echoing off the metal like a challenge.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top Bottom