Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private The Name That Pulled Me Here

Ironwraith set his helmet down gently on the counter behind her, the soft thud grounding the moment. He let his gaze linger on her, blue eyes meeting her steady brown ones, the faint smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth carrying both amusement and intent.

"Judgment, huh?" he said, stepping a fraction closer, just enough that the air between them felt charged, but careful not to crowd her. "Good thing I've always had a thing for women who can handle a little… calculated risk."

He let his eyes drift briefly, tracing the confident set of her shoulders, the way she balanced poise and ease, before returning to her face. His smirk deepened. "You make… danger look deliberate. Almost elegant."

He leaned a little closer, letting his presence fill the space behind her, her back fully to the counter, and spoke low, smooth, deliberately teasing: "And yet… I can't help noticing how effortlessly you make all that control look… tempting."


Ironwraith shifted, taking another step closer, keeping his tone playful but edged with warmth. "You know," he added, letting a pause hang between them, "I've seen a lot of chaos, a lot of calculated moves, but something about the way you measure it… makes me think I might like getting lost in your kind of trouble."


A faint chuckle escaped him as he let his fingers brush lightly against the counter near hers, not touching her, just close enough to feel the shared space. "I'm usually careful," he said, smirk curling. "But for someone like you? I'm willing to bend the rules a little."

He leaned his forehead just slightly toward hers, voice dropping into a near-whisper that carried both charm and daring. "You're… magnetic, Ana. Not just because of what you do, but because of how you carry it. And I'd be lying if I said I wasn't curious… more than curious."


He let it hang, letting her process the attention, the charm, the subtle challenge woven into every word, the quiet intensity that came from someone used to reading people, and choosing them.

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 
Ana didn't step back when he moved closer. Instead, she turned toward him, slow and deliberate, angling her body so the space between them felt chosen rather than claimed. One hand stayed on the counter, near his, close enough that the warmth there was unmistakable.

She met his eyes, steady and searching, and a small, genuine smile softened her expression.

"Careful," she said lightly, the word shaped more like an invitation than a warning. "Curiosity has a habit of costing more than people plan for."

She tilted her head just slightly, gaze never leaving his.

"Not credits," Ana added, quietly, as if answering the thought before it surfaced. "Attention. Consequences. Momentum."

Her fingers brushed his, brief and intentional, before she stepped closer, close enough now that her voice dropped without effort.

"But I don't mind that kind of cost," she said, softer. "Not when it's chosen."

She paused then. Not a hesitation but an opening. A beat where he could pull back, speak, stop it if he wanted to.

When he didn't, Ana closed the last inch herself.

The kiss was unhurried and gentle, a quiet press of certainty rather than urgency, her hand resting lightly at his wrist as if anchoring the moment. She lingered just long enough to make the choice clear, then eased back a fraction, still close, still present.

"That," she murmured, eyes warm and unguarded, "is me choosing. So if you're curious," she finished, "I'm not stopping you."

No rush. No claim. Just intention, left there between them to see what he would do with it.

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 
Ironwraith didn't rush it.
If anything, he moved with the same measured control she'd already seen in him all night, not because he lacked desire, but because he respected weight when it showed up. His hand came up to her jaw first, thumb resting there like a question instead of a claim, giving her every chance to pull away.
She didn't.


He leaned in and returned the kiss with the same quiet certainty she'd offered him. No hunger. No hurry. Just a steady, deliberate meeting, as if he were answering a statement rather than making one. When he eased back, it was only far enough to look at her properly, eyes searching her face like he was committing it to memory.

"Yeah," he murmured, voice low, roughened just enough to give the word gravity. "You definitely know the difference."
Only then did he guide her, gently, carefully, so she was sitting back against the counter. Not lifted, not pinned. Just repositioned, like he was making room for something that mattered. One hand stayed braced beside her, the other resting at her waist, steady and warm, nothing rushed about it.

He leaned in again, this time closer to her ear, his voice dropping.
"You don't flirt like someone who's bored," he said quietly. "You flirt like someone who chooses very carefully… and doesn't regret it when she does."
A faint smirk touched his mouth, not cocky, knowing.
"And I don't waste curiosity," he added. "Especially not the kind that looks back."


He brushed a brief, softer kiss at her cheek this time, a deliberate change of pace, before meeting her eyes again, close enough that the space between them felt alive.
"So," Ironwraith finished, calm and certain, "if this is you choosing… I'm still here."


Not pushing.
Not taking.
Just standing exactly where she'd invited him to be.

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 
Ana didn't flinch when he guided her back against the counter. She let it happen, not because she was yielding, but because she trusted the way he moved with her rather than around her. Her hands came to rest lightly at his sides, steady, present.

She held his gaze, close enough now that she could see the tiny shifts in his expression, the restraint threaded through it, and that made her smile again. Softer this time. Real.

"Good," she said quietly. Not teasing. Not challenging. Just satisfied. "I don't choose often. But when I do, I don't second-guess it."

Her thumb brushed once at his wrist, a small echo of the way he'd touched her jaw earlier, mirroring rather than escalating.

"And I don't mistake attention for intent," Ana added, her voice low, grounded. "You're here because you're listening. Because you stop when stopping matters."

She leaned in just enough to close the space again, not to kiss him this time, but close enough that the warmth lingered between them.

"That's not something I ignore," she finished. "So yes. This is me choosing."

She stayed there, unhurried, letting the moment breathe rather than pushing it forward—comfortable in the quiet certainty of it, and in the fact that he was still exactly where she'd invited him to be.

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 
Ironwraith's hands moved with care, deliberate and precise, as he lifted her so her legs rested lightly at his hips. He didn't rush; every motion spoke of patience, of respect, of the quiet understanding that she could pull away at any moment. The subtle tension in her muscles, the way she exhaled just slightly against him, told him she trusted the movement and he honored it.


He leaned in, brushing his lips against hers slowly, a gentle press that was patient rather than urgent. The faint sweetness of the Ion Pulse Elixir lingered there, mingling with the natural warmth of her skin. It was subtle, grounding, a tiny trace of her that was hers alone. His hand at her jaw tilted her head slightly, just enough to deepen the kiss without forcing it, letting her respond, or not, on her own terms.

Her hands found his shoulders, firm but not grasping, anchoring herself against him while leaving space for his touch. He could feel the way she pressed into him, minimal, deliberate, as if measuring the trust she was offering against the boundaries she always maintained. He kissed her again, longer this time, letting the softness of the moment stretch into something intimate, almost reverent.

A quiet breath of amusement slipped from him as he whispered near her ear, warm and low: "You're dangerous… but I like it." His words weren't a command; they were a confession, an acknowledgment of the draw he felt toward her. He caught the faintest smile, subtle and fleeting, but enough to keep him steady.

He tasted her again, slow and exploratory, lingering on the edges of the sweetness, the slight tang of the elixir fading into the warmth of her skin. One hand stayed firm beneath her legs, supporting her weight completely, while the other traced lightly from jaw to the back of her neck, careful to let her guide the pace. Every motion was a negotiation, a dialogue without words—her agency never overlooked, her consent present in every brush of lips and shift of bodies.


The shop's low hum faded behind them, leaving only the intimate sounds of breath, the faint friction of fabric, and the rhythm of hearts and lips meeting. Ironwraith pressed his forehead to hers for a moment, letting the closeness linger, letting her decide if it would go further or remain here, quiet and chosen.


He finally pulled back just enough to whisper again, lips grazing her ear, "Not supposed to be this… distracting." His voice was a mixture of charm, mischief, and the rare sincerity he only ever shared with someone close. Then, without waiting for a reaction, he kissed her once more, slow and tender, letting the moment stretch into a shared stillness, full of choice, warmth, and unspoken trust.

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 
Ana didn't stiffen when he lifted her. If anything, she let out a slow breath she hadn't realized she was holding, trusting the steadiness of his hands and the care in the way he moved. Her fingers stayed at his shoulders, not clinging, just there, an anchor she chose.

When he kissed her, she answered him without urgency, meeting him in the same measured way. No rush. No hunger, trying to outrun sense. Just a quiet, deliberate return that said yes, here rather than more, now. When he drew back enough to give her space, she didn't chase it—but she didn't retreat either.

Her forehead brushed his, close enough that their breath still mingled.

"Neither was I," she murmured softly, a hint of amusement threading through the honesty. "I tend to plan better than this."

One of her hands slid from his shoulder to rest briefly at his collarbone, a small, grounding touch before she let it fall away again.

"But I don't regret it," Ana added, quieter now. "And I don't do things I don't mean."

She leaned in just enough to brush a restrained, intentional kiss at the corner of his mouth, slower than his, gentler, unmistakably chosen, then rested her brow against his again.

"Let's keep this exactly where it is," she said, calm and certain. "For tonight."

Not a boundary drawn in fear. Just one set with clarity.

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 
Ironwraith didn't argue. He never had with boundaries that were spoken plainly, and this one was.

He eased her down with the same care he'd lifted her, hands steady, unhurried, making sure her boots found the floor before he let go. When he stepped back, it wasn't retreat so much as respect given form. The space between them settled into something calm instead of charged.


A smile tugged at his mouth, small, genuine, a little crooked.
"Yeah," he said quietly. "I don't regret it either."
He tipped his head once, a habit from long before this moment, eyes still on hers.


"I'm glad we met," he added. "Glad we got that drink. Glad you led the way." A faint huff of a chuckle followed. "And I'd be happy to see you again, no expectations attached. Kiss or no kiss."

He glanced around the shop briefly, taking in the low light, the order of things, then back to her.
"And for what it's worth," he said, tone shifting just enough to ground them both again, "I'm pretty sure the datapad will work. Might need a clean interface and a patient hand, but…" His gaze flicked to her with quiet confidence. "Feels like it ended up with the right person."

The smile stayed, easy now.
"Tonight can just be tonight," he finished. "That's enough."

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 
Ana watched him for a beat after he spoke, the quiet settling exactly where he'd left it. Then she nodded once, satisfied, and turned back toward the workbench.

She retrieved the datapad from where she'd left it earlier, fingers moving with practiced ease as she brought it to life. The screen flickered once, then stabilized. She keyed in a short access string, paused, adjusted a setting, and ran a diagnostic sweep. Clean. Responsive. No corruption, no hidden bleed.

"Interface held," she said calmly, more to herself than to him. "Handshake protocols are intact. No ghosting, no degradation."

She glanced up at him briefly, a small, approving smile touching her mouth.

"It'll do exactly what it's supposed to," Ana added. "And nothing it isn't."

She powered it back down and set it aside again, the motion deliberate, final.

"You were right," she said, meeting his eyes. "Tonight can just be tonight."

A beat, then warmer:

"But I'm glad it was this one."

She didn't say more. She didn't need to.

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 
Ironwraith reached for the datapad with careful, deliberate fingers, lifting it as if it weighed more than it did. He typed in a quick override, a sequence meant to check the older archives, the files that predated even his current designation. The pad hummed softly, responding to his command with a slow scroll through data long left untouched.

His eyes narrowed as he navigated deeper. Then he froze.
There it was. A file from years ago, from a life that felt both distant and unavoidable: the original infantry records. His birth name stared back at him from the header, typed clean and official, a reminder of the man he had been before all the designations, all the ranks, all the weight of what he'd carried since.


The air between him and Ana seemed to thicken. He didn't move immediately, just stared at the screen, letting the past he'd long compartmentalized press against the present. The old missions, the injuries, the friends lost, the promises kept, it was all there, distilled into a single file.

Finally, he exhaled slowly, pushing the pad slightly toward her without breaking eye contact.
"This… this one's from before everything changed," he said quietly, voice steady but threaded with something rare—an openness he usually reserved for ghosts and memories, not people. "My original record. Back when I was just infantry, before the names, before the armor."
He paused, letting the weight of it hang in the shop, a bridge between what was, what is, and, in a subtle way, what might still be.

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 
Ana didn't reach for the datapad right away.

She stayed where she was, eyes moving from the screen to his face, taking in the stillness that had settled over him. She recognized it instantly. Not surprise. Recognition. The quiet collision between who someone was and who they had become.

When she did speak, her voice was low, even, meant for no one but him.

"Then we have something in common," she said gently.

She stepped closer, just enough to look at the file without touching it, careful not to intrude on the moment more than it already demanded.

"Ana Rix isn't any more real than Ironwraith," she continued. "It's a name that fits the work. The life. The version of me that survives what I do."

A pause. Honest. Unembellished.

"I was born Veyana Rixell," she said quietly. "That name belongs to a girl who doesn't exist anymore. Not because she died… but because she chose not to stay."

Her gaze lifted to his, steady and unflinching, offering the truth without asking for anything in return.

"Names change when the world asks more of you than the old ones can carry," Ana said. "You don't lose yourself. You refine what survives."

She didn't ask about the file. Didn't comment on what it contained. Some things didn't need to be unpacked to be acknowledged.

"So if that record matters to you," she added softly, "it stays between us. Not as data. As history."

A small, sincere smile touched her mouth.

"You're Gabriel Rane," she said, not testing it, not weighing it. Just stating it. "And you're Ironwraith. Both are real. You just decide which one answers."

She let the silence return, respectful and intact, trusting him to decide what came next.

Ironwraith Ironwraith
 
Ironwraith's fingers hovered over the edge of the datapad for a long moment longer, then he locked the file and powered the screen dark. The soft click sounded louder than it should have.


"Gabriel Rane is gone," he said at last, not harsh, not bitter. Certain. "He did his part. He made his calls. Some of them were good. Some of them…" A breath, slow and controlled. "Some of them taught me what not to repeat."
He set the datapad down carefully, like setting a marker stone instead of discarding a relic.


"Ironwraith is who's left," he continued, lifting his eyes to hers. "Not as a mask. As a choice. A fresh start that doesn't pretend the past didn't happen, just that it doesn't get to drive anymore."
There was no bravado in it. Just clarity.

He inclined his head to her then, a small but unmistakable gesture of respect. Gratitude.
"Thank you," he said quietly. "For helping me see it without trying to pull it apart. For reminding me that remembering doesn't mean going back."
A faint, crooked smile touched his mouth. more human than the armor usually allowed.

"If I'm going to be better than who I was," he added, "it helps to know exactly where the cracks started."
He straightened slightly, the weight easing, not gone, but settled where it belonged.
"And for what it's worth," he finished, tone softer now, "I'm glad this was tonight too."

Ana Rix Ana Rix
 

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