Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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The Unforseen Beginning of a Glorious Partnership or (Spacemen)

Drips of fat sizzle in the coals as they fall from his mighty jaw. The firelight casts his frame in grotesque shadow against the pitch dark desert floor. On the horizon, a mountain shoots molten rock into the air. The five moons are dissolved into the rising plume. One, like him, approaches from the camp where others gather.​
"Mudak. We're ready."​
With dawn awakens machinations of darkness. Fire spouts from the belly of the world.​
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Kowahle, a town in the great southern expanses of the planet Sriluur.​


The first thing he does is wipe away the sand that's gathered on the windowsill. It falls, like dust, to the stone floor. Naji's room is a purgatorial mess in the pervasive grey dawn. Books are scattered carelessly on the ground, dirty clothes pile in the corners. A fading photograph is framed on the bedside table of two Weequay, embraced and smiling. Naji can look for only a moment.

His shirt sits folded in a drawer next to a black pistol. It is heavy and the barrel tastes of salt, but he leaves it behind. He buttons his shirt in the silent house. She stands in the next room, staring wordlessly at an empty crib. Her body is thin and frail.

"Tas," he says from the doorway. "I'm off for the morning. I'll see you for lunch." The ghoulish figure speaks not, moves not. She just stands there like a specter among the dusty toys, the vacant crib, and the gently spinning mobile of stars and moons. Naji steps off without a goodbye.

~

The people rise with the morning heat, stacking linens into piled sheets, baking bread that's nearly done, whispers of wars that cannot be won, the air hangs heavy with foreign spices, junkers hammering on their devices, market stalls along the streets, butchers curing assorted meats, a blind musician plays the bass viol, familiar sounds haunt Naji's soul, sewage and shite in the gutter festers, madmen raving along like jesters, smugglers and pirates and outlaws and cheats, gathered at Time's End for their drinks, among the craters of this desolate land, Kowahle- a city built in the sand.

~

The old woman is a fixture of the town. Her wrinkled face masks two sad eyes that speak of her many years on this barren world; the heartache, the toil, the loss of her family to slavers and bandits. There is a small spark that hints at the occasional triumph, and that makes it all the more tragic.

Passersby drop coins into her outstretched hand. "Morning, mother", they say. Naji too pays his fare to the haggard matron of the sands. "Storms a-coming," she croaks.

An endless ring of desert stretches around the town. It is busy, but small. Only three thousand men, women, and children inhabit it. There is money to be made if one has the right skills. Caravans of water, copper ore, food, and supplies come in from the desert and from the skies, touching down on the spaceport around which the market is set.

Shady traders speak with fear of the Hutts and their gangs operating in the badlands, of how every maneuver in the town is done so with their blessings. None complain. To do so would be to invite death and anarchy.

The roaring morning crowds mask the first screams, but the sound of blaster fire is undeniable. Bolts of red streak into air and the panic begins. Smoke rises in another corner of the town. Naji works through the riotous crowd to try and see what is happening. Someone screams "Houks!" and the truth becomes apparent - slavers are raiding the town.

Panic overcomes him. Naji races through the crowd, using his heavy frame to knock away the smaller bystanders, but he trips and falls all the same. Around him, the crowd is crushing, but through their legs he can see a wounded man crawling along the ground. There is no time. Naji picks himself up and carries on.

A fire burns outside the school. Hysterical parents cry out as Houk slavers, decorated barbarically with bones and metal, bind children with chains and lead them into the backs of awaiting speeders. Armed with rifles and spears, they hold back the crowd. One keeps watch on a nearby rooftop.

Naji finds a break in the crowd and runs for the school, but a Houk with bones piercing his oily face holds him back. "Please," says Naji with great fear. "Those are my students. I teach here, I teach kids, and that's them. You can't- you can't take them. They're not slaves. They're just kids."

The Houk smirks. "Hutts pay for these school and these kids, but you people ain't payed the Hutts. These kids is property now."

"I don't know anything about that," says Naji. His face cracks with desperation. All the parents are silently watching him plead. "The kids don't pay anything, it's the council. Talk to them."

"We done talking. Go home 'fore you get hurt," says the guard.

"Not without those kids."

"What'd you say, mag?"

It occurs to Naji, in this moment, that he would rather be dead than live with letting his students be taken away. Perhaps, he considers, there is a reason he never pulled that trigger on himself on the many occasions he would have liked to. He decides to tap into a power he does not yet totally understand, one that has followed him his whole life, one called the Force.

"I said, 'not without those kids', mag."

The Houk steps forward to attack him, but Naji raises his hand and summons every bit of strength he can muster. With the Force, he knocks the Houk to the ground, stunning everyone in attendance.

"Now," he says. "Those kids."

The effect is lost. From on the rooftop, the sniper shoots at Naji's feet and elicits a cry from the crowd. Naji raises his hands. It's over, he thinks. They've called my bluff.

The downed Houk, enraged, gets to his feet. "You're dead, now, mag. You and the kids." The last thing he sees is the stock of the rifle cracking against his skull.

All is black.

~ ~ ~​

The blurry world returns to him bit by bit. Naji can feel the dried blood on his skull and the blistering pain it brings him.

Sound. The whimpering of children. A roaring engine. Then, sight. His cage is loaded into the back of a moving speeder gliding across the desert at twilight. He's been shackled, but so have they, the six- no, seven children in the cage with him. They look with wide, terrified eyes at their wounded teacher for help, but he can offer little, and they weep gently together.

Later, they are awakened again by ash that falls like snow. The prisoners rise and grip the bars, their gaze fixed on the fiery volcano and the lighted camp at its base. No moons, no stars.
 

Here Arris

Righteously Delighted
"Seven?"
"Five."
"Seveeen..?"
"Fiv-"
"Seven."
"Five."
"Seven. Please?"
"Fi-"
"Five?"
"Five it is."
" . . . "
"Six...?"
​"Kark out of here, vanilla face."

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. ╚══╝||╚══╝

Auspicious start to the day that would be one of reckoning, no doubt about that. Looking back on it from his current position in a sweltering hot four meter by four meter clay-walled cell, shared with an indignant and blustering mercenary who is most certainly not in charge of all his mental capabilities, perhaps it wasn't all so bad then. The hinterlands of Sriluur may be uglier than the natives who live in this condemned land and the weather is certainly not worthy of a good vacation review, but the inside of that stuffy Weequay's scrap shop was the Mirror Room in the palace of Naboo in comparison to his current location. In fact, selling a pair of jury-rigged focusing lens' for five hundred credits was the high point of the day, given that their operation would be...Less than optimal, the parts he had to work with being of quite low quality.

Whatever will be, will be.

Like the soon-to-be droid whose ocular sockets will erupt after three to five days of regular operation.

Also like his soon to be hanging corpse from the ramparts of one of the more destitute pirate strongholds on Sriluur. It couldn't even be one of the more prominent gangs, at least then when some Skywalker or other comes blazing through it on a rampage of justice, his final acts would be attached to a place of some repute. No, no rather it is one of the many irrelevant backwater, Hutt space, surface-level caravan raiding crews.

What an abysmal ending to an abysmal life, but where did it go wrong? Perhaps hiring the self-hating Mandolorian with the bipolar mean streak as bait was a bad idea, especially when he wasn't aware he was being used as bait. If that is where the plan went amiss, then nothing could be helped about it. The look of his face down in the shipyard as a voice that was supposed to be an ally's came across the hacked loudspeakers, alerting all the crooks and criminals in what must have been a fifty mile radius to his presence. . .

. . .

The man who is Here Arris laughs as often as he breathes, but it is rare that he finds himself unable to do both at the same time because of the former. However much he enjoys playing with the emotions and fate of others, he is a slicer, through-and-through. He never forgot his duty. Weaving through the emptied pirate hideout, he never forgot his duty. Seeing the locked cages of children shackled together, he may have been moved enough to whisk away the keys to their confines, but he did not have the time to release them, for he did not forget his duty.

The mission was simple. Infiltrate a lower tier Hutt crime syndicate outpost, access their information data holds and take from within whatever was worth taking- rumor even had it that the Hutts' may have gotten their hands...Paws...Tentacles(?) on pass-codes to various One Sith and Republican data encryptions. Was it true? Most certainly not. While they may be capable, the primary source of power that the Hutts' possess come from the illusion of exactly how far that influence is spread. So in the end, this is what he has:

No pass-codes.
No loot.
No escape.
An irritable loose cannon whose trust he may or may not have betrayed, locked in a small, scorching hot kiln with him.
A key-ring.

And most obviously...

No hope.

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Cambry Owens

A Pseudo-Mandolorian. Sort of.
Location | Sriluur, the Outer Rim
Objective | Make busy.
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The job. It always had to be about the job for him.
Credits? Some people lived for credits, but to Verne, it seemed like Cambry just lived for working to get them. Happiest on a job, happiest with a course set, happiest on the ground with a gun in his hand. He wouldn’t admit it, but that’s what he had been chasing since the two of them had left the Red Ravens, months earlier, over…”ideological” differences. Meaning, “we don’t want to get tickled by the Black Sun for sticking our necks out for a bunch of self-impressed criminals”. Especially since it wasn’t clear which side would win.
Since then, they’d been wandering the starways. Just the way it suited them.
A routine cargo run to Sriluur, one of many krifpits in the Outer Rim. Sure, there was the danger of Hutt Entanglements, but it had been a while, and he didn’t expect to stay long.
Of course, they ended up staying longer than they’d have expected. While Verne had anticipated his Captain exiting the cantina after two hours with new bruises and bloody gauntlets, he had returned instead with a job.
Can’t be harder than Tatooine.
<<That was Tusken Raiders, I believe? Aboriginals? No better than some low manner of savage beast. These...this scum. They practice a far less empty-headed form of savagery. And they have guns.>>
The spacer smirked at his droid companion, sweat from the sun slicking his skin in the midday air. The port around them was mostly quiet, the odd workman ambling from point a to point b. Cambry relaxed back against a crate, though his glance shot at the passing Sullustian, a complex mind working behind those clear eyes.
It’ll be night time, dark-like. I’d love to see hairless Wookies like those things catch me in the dark.” He hesitated, frowning. “I mean, I wouldn’t- Anyway. This ain’t so bad.” His hand came across his forehead, sweeping back his mess of sweaty hair, and doing absolutely nothing to make it look better. “This isn’t a war zone or some stang sting operation, like the...other times.” He waved a hand dismissively. “This’ll go fine. Have some faith, eh? Startin’ to feel the lack of support.
Verne whirred in a sort of electronic sigh, the astromech’s head swiveling.
<<Despite your expansive assurances, my opinion is unchanged;
I’ve got a bad feeling about this.>>

You’re a droid, you don’t have feelings.” Cambry grinned.
-|_-::-_|-
Verne lost all communication when the slavers ripped the comm system from Cambry’s helmet. But the droid didn’t need a humanoid’s imagination to know what had happened; things hadn’t gone quite according to plan. His sarcastic tone was dark as he spoke to the air.
<<Wonderful. Boring conversation anyway.>>
Cambry would’ve made Sprey proud with the swearing and twisting and flailing he did, but the Houks that hurled him into the cell weren’t so impressed. They mumbled and laughed roughly with each other as the door slammed shut on the defeated spacer, who promptly stumbled to his feet and fruitlessly pounded on the metal bars.
NO ONE TAKES MY KRIFFIN’ STUFF! I'LL SHOW YOU WHAT HAPPENS, YEAH?
He roared and slammed an angry fist against the bars with a final clang, and slowly stepped back, his feet placing on the dusty ground wearily. Finally, he fell to his backside, destitute, picturing closing his fingers around that backstabbing kriffer’s neck, and squeezing.
The poor soul in the cage across huddled against the back wall, watching with wide eyes as the loud, angry man just squeezed the ever-lovin’ life out of the musty air.
[member="Here Arris"] | [member="Naji Asiim"]​
 
"Please, let me stay with them. They're scared and I-"

A stiff punch in the gut silences Naji. The captured children are herded off to another part of the camp. Their frightened, fragile voices disappear. Now, there is the sound of fire and drunken carousing.

Two Houks lead Naji across the camp. It appears semi-permanent. Tents and huts are set up around the clay ruins of an old village at its center. Smiths and merchants dot the path, almost giving the appearance of a small town. Women of various species lounge half-naked around a ruined mill; flickering lights and the smell of booze drift out past them. Some are in chains.

"Where are the children?" he asks his captors. They say nothing and march him towards a row of rough cages, dimly lit. "No, please, listen to me!"

One of the Houks tosses him face-first into the cell. Naji gets to his feet and rushes for the door, but it is locked before he can escape. "No, no, no..."

He desperately rattles the door, but it's of no use. "No, no, no, please, no, no! I need to- just let the children go, please!" Naji falls to the ground, muttering. It is only after a moment that he comes to his senses and examines his surroundings.

In the corner, masked in shadow, there is another in the cell.

[member="Cambry Owens"] | [member="Here Arris"] | [member="Kyber Salurra"]​
 

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