Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Pamarthe in peril

The hangar smelled of hot oil and ozone — a clean, metallic sting that always calmed Alyssa the way the sea used to when the wind was right. Her hands were grease-dark beneath the sleeves of her flight-smock, fingers moving by muscle memory as she traced a faulty hydraulic line on a Peace Corps patrol skiff. Outside, the sky over her homeworld was a bright, uncomplicated blue; the kind of day that made people forget how small they were.

She had almost finished the line when the diagnostics pinged on her wrist-reader: three anomalous signatures in the north quadrant airspace, drifting slow and low over three separate grid substations. At first she assumed maintenance drones — contractors — but the IDs came back blank. No flight plan. No clearance. The readouts showed passive sensor sweeps tuned to electromagnetic emissions, not broadcasting, just listening.

Alyssa's jaw tightened. She double-tapped the data and pulled it onto the hangar wall — a map with pulsing dots where each object hung like a bruise. Whoever put them up had done it with restraint: minimal energy, minimal profile, but precise placement. Monitoring several power grids at once wasn't amateur work.

She wiped her hands on a rag and climbed onto the wing of the skiff to get a better angle, fingers tracing the riveted seam as if its rhythm could steady her thoughts. The Force — a word she had not even allowed herself in weeks — stirred at the edge of her awareness like a distant echo. It wasn't a voice or a vision, only a tightening in the back of her skull and a coldness in the palms she blamed on the oil. She breathed it down. Not yet. Not now.

Still, the pattern gnawed at her. Power hubs were lifelines — hospitals, comm relays, aerostat anchors. Monitoring them could be reconnaissance, testing, or the first step to something worse. Whoever had deployed those objects wanted to learn where people were vulnerable.

She pulled up the network logs. The objects were passively collecting: voltage fluctuations, load-balancing schedules, maintenance windows. Nothing alarming if viewed in isolation. Alarming as a whole.

Alyssa tapped open her contacts and found Kathryn Foster. Kathryn had a way of seeing things that made Alyssa both grateful and unsettled — the kind of friend who could read a map of numbers and find the hand that drew it. She hesitated only a beat before composing.

The holo-message projected a thin, blue rectangle above her wrist. Her fingers moved quickly, deliberately, not letting the tremor in her chest show.

Kath —
Found three unmarked sensor platforms over the north substations. Passive EM sweeps, precision placement, no clearance. Looks like they're mapping load windows and relay timings. Not contractors. Not local.
Can you meet? I have logs and a thread that points to coordinated monitoring of multiple grids. If you can't come, I'll send the raw files. Keep this off the channel for now.

— Alyssa
She added one final line, then deleted it. No mention of the quiet sense that had pushed her to look — no hint of the Force under her skin. She wasn't ready for that to complicate anything. Kathryn didn't need that. Not yet.

A single press sent the message into the small, private relay between old friends. The holo winked out. Alyssa sat back on the skiff's wing and looked at the map one more time, the three pulsing dots waiting like questions in the open sky. Outside the hangar, a maintenance skiff glided past, its pilot laughing into a comm. The world went on. But somewhere above the power grids, silent watchers listened.


Kathryn Foster Kathryn Foster
 
It's one of life's mysteries, sir...
Kathryn and a couple of others from the Outbound Flight was gathered around one of the tables in The Wayfinders cafeteria, talking about business aboard in general and having a rather laid-back time as most of them were off-duty. That was when her comm suddenly beeped and buzzed, and she received a rather unexpected message, from a person she hadn't heard from since way back during her time with the Confederacy. Unexpected, yes. But definitely not unwelcome, she thought as she read the message with a slight smile. However, her smile quickly turned to a face of concern, and she excused herself to the others before rising from the table and headed out to the corridors. Even though they haven't met in a good while, the message felt urgent, serious and came from a friend who's homeplanet was under some kind of threat that she turned to Kathryn for help with was more than enough for the former CIS colonel not to think twice about coming to her friends aid.

<''Give me a day and I'll be there. I'm practically jumping into my flight suit as we write. Hang on, and keep the comms to a minimum.''> Kath typed in and sent while on her way to the hangar. She made sure to call her superior on the Outbound explaining the situation, and fortunately for Kydd Kathryn wasn't about to go on duty for a couple of more days. She made a quick stop by her quarters and packed a duffle bag with all the necessities, before she headed off to the hangar and her locker with her flight gear all hung up tidy and waiting. Ever since she joined the Outbound Flight, her hours in the cockpit had grown slowly but steady, which she was very thankful for and it always brought a smile to the otherwise restless, born and raised pilot from Denon. Kathryn let her hand touch her old insignias once in rememberance of old times. The people gathering under the banner of the Outbound Flight came from all kinds of backgrounds and had their own stories, some might have called them something resembling mercenaries, but they were explorers in the interest of the common good and didn't fight if not fired upon first. Was this going to be one such occasion? Her thoughts wandered to all the people she had served with, before she pulled out the flight suit, the harness and the helmet out and put everything on like she had done it thousands of times. That last part probably weren't that far from the truth.

Once in full flight gear, Kath headed out the locker room and towards her T-77, brought over from the Confederacy to the Alliance and now to the Outbound Flight. She would never grow tired of this bird, and seeing it waiting there in the hangar filled her with both happiniess, anticipation and confidence. She knew that machine inside and out, by now. Thanks to that, it wasn't long til she sat in the cockpit and saluted the ground crew before taxiing off to the take off-area. Once the go was issued, Kathryn punched the throttle and were off into the dark, deep space heading for Pamarthe.

She made sure to update her friend on the journey and when she landed, she asked the first available person about Kydd's whereabouts, taking off her helmet as she did so and headed directly for her friend.

 
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The coastal wind of Pamarthe pushed against the hangar doors like a living thing, carrying brine and storm-scent through the open framework. Alyssa stood near the scaffolding of an unfinished skiff, wiping down a panel with a purposeful rhythm meant to anchor her whirring thoughts. The incoming message from Kathryn hit her wrist-reader with a soft tone — quiet, but it raced through her like a pulse of heat.

Give me a day and I'll be there… Hang on, and keep the comms to a minimum.

Alyssa exhaled, the tension in her shoulders loosening as if someone had untangled the cords holding her up. Kathryn was coming. Stars, she was actually coming. A comfort swept through Alyssa with the warmth of a hearth-fire in a storm shelter. She allowed herself a small, private smile before switching gears.

Comfort or not, the threat hadn't evaporated.

She pushed off the scaffold and strode toward the command workspace, boots echoing in the wide metallic hush. The Peace Corps outpost wasn't a fortress, but she'd rebuilt enough of its vehicles to know where the vulnerabilities lay. She tapped her wrist device, pulling up the sensor logs again. Three unknown platforms over three substations. Coordinated. Patient. Watching.

Not on my planet. Not on my watch.

Alyssa opened the local defense registry and began threading through access she technically wasn't supposed to have. A spark of Force intuition — quiet as a heartbeat in another room — nudged her toward the west perimeter grid. She followed it without naming it, fingers dancing across the interface, rerouting auxiliary power to early-warning nodes, tightening blackout protocols, and pushing a silent alert to the Peace Corps command head. Nothing panicked. Nothing that would draw notice. Just preparation.

She moved next to the skiff Kathryn would see first when she landed, double-checking the shield coupler and swapping out an old stabilizer clamp. Her mind replayed Kathryn's voice, confident and dry, the way it always steadied the air around her.

The comm on her wrist buzzed again. A proximity ping. Kathryn had entered system space.

Alyssa's heart lifted — a small, startled feeling, as if she'd been holding her breath for days.

She opened a secure channel and sent Kathryn the coordinates:
Pamarthe Peace Corps Base, Coastal Hangar Six. Bay 14. I'll be waiting.

Outside, the sky darkened into a bruise-colored dusk, and the wind sharpened. As if the planet itself sensed what Alyssa had felt the moment she saw the sensor data: something out there was watching, weighing, choosing its moment.

Kathryn Foster Kathryn Foster
 
It's one of life's mysteries, sir...
Kathryn set the T-77 down at the coordinates sent to her by her friend, accompanied by an escort loyal to The Alliance and her.

''Alyssa!'' she uttered upon removing her helmet and extended her arms wide upon seeing her friend. Kath wanted to pull the fellow pilot into a great hug seeing her. ''It's so good to see you!'' she said and pulled her friend into a tight hug. ''I'm always here to give you a hand, you know that, and The Alliance with me!'' Kath said and pointed backward at the fighters landing with her.

 
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Alyssa chuckled at the embrace from Kath. It was refreshing to know that a friend was always there in the universe of madness and chaos. As the other fighters landed, she took note of the total size of the squad. This would be useful.

"B-77! My how i missed flying one of those things, ha!" . She gave a kiss on the cheek and asked, "So , what division are you with now? How was your travel? Who are these guys with you? So much to catch up on, but most importantly a brief on a potential situation."


Kathryn Foster Kathryn Foster
 
It's one of life's mysteries, sir...
In all the chaos and the urgency of the matter why Kathryn was there, it was so good to see the younger pilot and friend of hers, and share a brief emotional moment with her.

''Well, let's get down to business and I'll take you up for a ride as my wingman afterwards!'' Kath chuckled, wearing a bright smile ever since she had climbed down the ladder and spotted her friend standing and waiting for them in the landing bay. She would admit that the kiss on the cheek made her think for a short moment, but she didn't overthink it. ''You need to get yourself a man, Kydd!'' she jested and nudged the younger woman in the side.

''Oh, these people?'' Kathryn said and threw a glance back at the pilots shutting down their fighters and making the regular post-landing checks. ''May I present the best of the best! The créme de la créme of the 1st Expeditionary Fleet! My vanguard, men and women I wouldn't trade for anything!'' Kathryn described with a wide sweep of her hand over the squadron now having sat down on Pamarthe and was ready to defend it if needed be.

''So, what is the latest intel? Can we talk somewhere in private about the situation?'' she asked, promoting them to get down to business and assess the situation for which Kydd's planet have found itself in front of.

 
The landing bay still hummed with cooling engines and ticking hull plates when Alyssa stepped forward, wind tugging at the loose strands of her hair. For a heartbeat, none of the sensor grids or hovering watchers mattered. It was just Kathryn. Same posture. Same fire in her eyes. Same gravity that made a room feel smaller and safer at once.

The kiss on Kathryn's cheek had been instinct. Familiar. Warm. Alyssa rolled her eyes at the nudge.

"Careful, Foster. I fix engines for a living. I know where the fuel lines are."

Her smile lingered, then softened as she glanced past Kathryn to the squadron disembarking behind her. The pilots moved with disciplined ease, hands brushing hulls like old friends. Not conquerors. Not marauders. Explorers with teeth.

"Best of the best, huh?" Alyssa tilted her head. "Good. We may need them."

Kathryn's shift in tone tightened the air between them.

Private.

Alyssa nodded once. "Command room's this way."

They moved through the corridor, boots echoing against durasteel decking. The base wasn't grand, but it was efficient. Sealed bulkheads. Reinforced glass panels facing the sea cliffs. A storm was gathering offshore, thick clouds folding over the horizon like a slow bruise.

Inside the command room, Alyssa sealed the door and activated a localized dampening field. The soft hum swallowed stray signals.

She pulled the data up on the central holo-table.

Three red points shimmered over a map of the northern hemisphere.

"Three objects," Alyssa began, her voice shifting from warmth to steel. "Appeared forty eight hours ago. No registered flight plan. No transponder. They're running passive electromagnetic sweeps over our primary power substations."

The holo zoomed in. Waveforms danced in tight, deliberate patterns.

"They're not just observing output," she continued. "They're mapping load fluctuations. Maintenance windows. Relay timings. They know when shields dip for calibration. They know when hospitals switch to backup. They're building a vulnerability profile."

Kathryn would recognize the pattern instantly. This wasn't random surveillance.

"It's coordinated," Alyssa said quietly. "All three platforms are synchronized to microsecond intervals. Whoever deployed them has centralized processing power somewhere off-world. These are just eyes."

She crossed her arms, though her fingers flexed unconsciously against her sleeves.

"I haven't engaged. Not yet. If we spook them, they pull back and we lose the trail. But if they're testing response times…" Her jaw tightened. "An attack could follow."

A flicker passed through her awareness again. That subtle tightening in the air. The sense of pressure before lightning strikes. She didn't name it. Didn't need to.

"I've quietly rerouted auxiliary shields to the substations and placed early-warning nodes along the coastal approach. Your squadron gives us interception capability if one of those things shifts from passive to active."

She looked at Kathryn fully now.

"I don't think this is piracy. Too precise. Too patient. This feels like someone preparing to flip a switch."

Outside, thunder rolled over the ocean.

"I need your read, Kath. Does this smell like Confederacy-era recon to you? Imperial remnant? Corporate black-site probing?"

Alyssa stepped closer to the holo, lowering her voice.

"And if it is a prelude to something bigger… we need to decide whether to swat the flies or follow the wire back to the spider."


Kathryn Foster Kathryn Foster
 
It's one of life's mysteries, sir...
"Careful, Foster. I fix engines for a living. I know where the fuel lines are."

Kathryn chuckled, rather amused of her friends antics. It was a good sign in this serious matter that they had met, and having their friendship in mind and a bit of humor close at hand would probably help them keep focus and think more straight. Having a light and friendly background in all of this would be to their benefit.

''Oh, thought I could't like you more than I already did, Kydd! Remember me to recruit you to The Alliance once all of this is over! Pilots who know their way around an aircraft without an enginer is always welcome!'' Kathryn stated with a steady smile on her lips, walking down the corridors with Kydd to the command room. Her pilots stayed close to the hangar and made the final post-landing preparations making sure their fighters were ready for the next flight. She had missed her, and her brother, and really felt that today when they had been summoned together.

Inside the command room, Alyssa sealed the door and activated a localized dampening field. The soft hum swallowed stray signals.

She pulled the data up on the central holo-table.

Three red points shimmered over a map of the northern hemisphere.

"Three objects," Alyssa began, her voice shifting from warmth to steel. "Appeared forty eight hours ago. No registered flight plan. No transponder. They're running passive electromagnetic sweeps over our primary power substations."

The holo zoomed in. Waveforms danced in tight, deliberate patterns.

"They're not just observing output," she continued. "They're mapping load fluctuations. Maintenance windows. Relay timings. They know when shields dip for calibration. They know when hospitals switch to backup. They're building a vulnerability profile."

Kathryn would recognize the pattern instantly. This wasn't random surveillance.

Kathryn listened to Alyssa's full description of the situation, studing the three dots as the did, and fell into a silent thought for a moment. If they didn't know the size of their perpetrators and if they were controlled from somewhere off-world and out of this star system, somewhere remotely like drones or something, they could not just go up there and try to identify them. If they didn't have some good jamming devices, that was. If they didn't, all of their chances to identify their true foe would be lost once the drones or ships left the star system.

''What do they want? What do you got on Pamarthe that other nearby systems don't have?'' Kath asked sincerely and looked upon her friend. Was it resources? Technology? The planet as a whole? They could only speculate about that, but hopefully Alyssa had some intel on that matter. Why would Pamarthe be a prime target for their foe?

Kathryn took a big breath, keeping her gaze upon the three red dots on the screen. ''To me, it speaks of something artificial! Something robotic and hard to tell what their intentions are. We have to be careful, but still not give them what they want!'' she stated, coming to think of her campaign on Mechis III with renegade robots everywhere. This could be something similar, or bigger, and the robots could very well be controlled by any of the factions that Alyssa just mentioned.

''We're here to help you, Alyssa. Personally, considering they seem to just be doing recons as of now, time is on our side. The Alliance is on your side. You think you and me should go up and take a closer look at these bogeys? We'd might spook 'em, but if your intelligence could confirm their identity... well, that would give us an edge if they decide to go the next stage...'' she suggestioned. Physical eyes on things was always the best, but if they would have to chase the buggers to somewhere undisclosed? What would happen? What would they do, and would it be possible to point out the source? Kath was definitely not sure about that, but it could be worth a shot. They could pick up their radio and data transmissions too.

 
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