Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Unyielding Tides





C o n s u m i n g


Scherezade deWinter Scherezade deWinter


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Coruscant, Level 1313 — The Veins of the Underworld



The undercity breathed in choked gasps.

Steam hissed from broken vents. Neon bled down rain-slick durasteel walls, pooling into gutters that ran red and violet beneath the fractured light. The scent was oil, ozone, and rot — the perfume of the forgotten. Above, the towers of Coruscant pierced the clouds like the bones of gods, gleaming high above the filth that fed them.


Down here, the stars didn't shine.
Down here, everything beautiful came to die.
And through it all, he walked.


The air changed before he appeared. A coldness. A slow, creeping pressure that wrapped itself around lungs and thoughts alike — as if the world itself held its breath. Conversations stuttered. Cantina doors closed. Even the hum of passing speeders faltered when he stepped through the mist.

Bane Kaohal.

Cloaked in shadow, his hood drawn low over a shock of fiery orange hair that caught the neon light like the dying tail of a comet. Rain clung to the hardened lines of his face — a face carved from stone and scar. His eyes burned faintly beneath the hood, twin embers in the dark, promising ruin to those foolish enough to look too long.

The street bent away from him as he passed, the crowd parting instinctively — prey yielding to a predator that didn't need to snarl. Every step he took seemed to echo beyond the physical, the duracrete trembling faintly beneath his boots, the air humming with that unseen, suffocating energy. The Force twisted around him, thick and oppressive, carrying with it the faint smell of ash.

He turned down a side street. Rain poured harder. The light grew thin and gray.

A dozen mercenaries waited there — armor patched, eyes mean, the kind of men who made a living feeding on the desperate. The leader, a Nikto with a cybernetic jaw, smirked as he stepped forward, blaster slung carelessly at his side.

"Long way from the skylanes, stranger," he rasped. "Lose your nerve up there?"


Bane didn't answer.
He didn't even look up.


"Hey," the Nikto said again, louder this time. "I'm talking to y—"


The air snapped.
Sound died.
Every nerve screamed.


A crushing weight slammed down on the group, invisible yet absolute. Armor creaked under the pressure; breath turned to gasps. The nearest merc fell first, hands clutching his skull, veins bulging at his temples. Another dropped his weapon as his mind flooded with images that weren't his — fire. Screams. A den collapsing in crimson light. The smell of burnt fur and blood.

The Nikto staggered, forcing the word out through clenched teeth.

"Wh… what are you?"

Bane finally raised his head. His eyes caught the light — molten, empty.


"…Nothing."


The word rippled through the Force like the toll of a distant bell. The Nikto's body seized, lifted, and collapsed with a dull crack that echoed off the durasteel walls.


Silence.
Only the rain dared move.


The street smelled of ozone and fear. Bodies lay still, steam rising from their armor. For a long moment, Bane stood motionless, his head bowed, rain streaming down his face. And then — faintly, like a sigh across dry bone — came the whisper.


Not a voice, but a vibration.


A low, rhythmic pulse beneath hearing, as if the Dark Mantle itself drew breath. It stirred beneath his cloak — unseen, yet alive — a relic carved from the bones of his bloodline, humming in response to the deaths it tasted.

It sounded like bone scraping over stone. Like hearts slowing to stillness. Like ancestral ghosts murmuring his name.


He did not touch it. He did not have to.
Its hunger was his own. It’s grief, his reflection.


Bane lingered in the quiet, watching the rain wash crimson into the drains. The whisper faded, leaving only the hollow sound of water striking metal. He exhaled once, long and tired, then turned away.

The pressure in the air lifted as he moved — though none who had felt it would ever forget the suffocation, nor the sight of those burning eyes.

Bane disappeared into the labyrinth of light and shadow once more.


A ghost. A curse.


The storm that had long forgotten why it raged.



 
Bane Kaohal Bane Kaohal

From the balcony two levels up, his storm was only a whisper.

Scherezade leaned forward against the rusted railing, letting the rain soak into her hair. The neon lights of her surroundings painted her in flickers of rose, cyan, and bloodlight red, with each flash catching on the polished edges of her Armatura. She looked like someone sculpted for war and then misplaced in a gutter.

Below, she watched.

The air still trembled from him. Even from here, she could taste the violence. The mercenaries' screams had been short, but the echoes lingered, crawling through the Undercity. She popped another cube of cheese into her mouth, chewing slowly. The bag crinkled in her gauntleted hand.

"Well," she murmured around the mouthful, "someone's having a worse night than I am."

The scent of a Coruscanti sewer drifted up, mingling with the grease and damp rot of Level 1313. Her glowing green eyes followed the lone figure as he turned away, the black of his cloak swallowing what little light dared follow. There was something off about him, something that made the Force hum in her blood, spiking her interest.

She licked cheese dust from her fingers, thoughtful.

Most people down here would flee from a thing like that. But Scherezade had never been most people. She tilted her head, gaze sharp, curious, a child studying a dangerous toy she half-intended to break.

"Nothing," she echoed under her breath, the corner of her mouth quirking. "Let's see about that."

And with that, she gathered the bag, brushed the crumbs from her armour, and stepped off the balcony, using the Force to descend gracefully to a spot not too far in front of him.
 





The alley swallowed sound.

Only the rain remained — hissing, whispering, falling in thin silver sheets that clung to the edges of his cloak.

Bane's steps slowed. Then stopped.

The Dark Mantle murmured. Not aloud — never aloud — but deep beneath his skin, where the pulse and thought met. The voice was a rasp of memory and malice, layered like a dozen tongues whispering over one another. Names. Faces. His own among them.

He drew in a sharp breath through his teeth and pressed a hand to the side of his head, fingers digging against his temple as if he could claw the noise out.

"Enough," he growled under his breath — though even he didn't know whether it was to the Mantle or to himself.

The whisper only deepened, a low tremor crawling down his spine. The walls seemed to lean closer; shadows folded inward. His fiery hair clung to his face, rain tracing lines across the angular stone of his jaw. His eyes — molten, furious — burned through the darkness like the promise of a storm breaking loose.

His other hand twitched at his side, the tendons tightening — wanting the hilt of Shadowrend, wanting something to cut, to silence, to bleed the noise out.

A faint shudder escaped him — half rage, half restraint — and then stillness.

That awful, coiled stillness that came right before a predator remembered what it was.

He exhaled once, slow, smoke on ice. The Mantle hushed — not gone, but listening.


That's when he felt it.
A new ripple in the rain.
The shift of air — alive, deliberate, near.


The storm behind his eyes stilled.
His head turned slightly, predatory.
Someone was coming.


And for the first time in too long, Bane Kaohal smiled — a quiet, crooked thing that had no warmth in it at all.


 
Bane Kaohal Bane Kaohal

Scherezade was rarely a woman who could pull subtle off, and so the ripple he felt wasn't subtle in the slightest. It came wrapped in laughter and giggles, carried by the Force before she came into view, a shimmer at the edge of perception that didn't quite fit the rot and ruin of Level 1313.

Then the rain shifted.

She landed in the mouth of the alley in a crouch, boots splashing through a shallow pool that glowed faintly violet under the neon hum. The Force cushioned her fall so gently it might have been flight. Her armour caught the light in a thousand thin lines, looking almost precious for a moment instead of a protective piece of gear.

A bag dangled from one hand.

"Oh, hello!" She straightened, tucking a strand of wet hair behind her ear, the movement casual as if she hadn't just dropped two stories into a murder scene. "Didn't think anyone else was still alive down here."

Yes, she was lying through her teeth. It was obvious, and she knew it. It didn't matter though. Her eyes found him, burning and bright, their blue almost too sharp against the smog and shadow. For a heartbeat, there was no hostility in them. Just curiosity.

She lifted the bag, shook it slightly. "Cheese cube?" The Force stirred between the two. She wasn't certain what it was, but something about him felt like home. If home was the king of place you went to when you were looking for a bad fight. Scherezade grinned. "Or are you one of those 'I don't eat while I'm brooding' types?"

The rain hissed between them. The neon flickered. Somewhere deep beneath the city, machinery groaned. Scherezade didn't move any closer. She didn't need to. The air between them was already heavy with the shared hum of old violence, and the promise of new conversation. Unless the ginger was dumb enough to believe she was like the bodies he'd just taken care of.
 






The alley pulsed with quiet light, steam rising in lazy columns that twisted between them.

Bane stood still, half-shrouded by the leaking neon and rain. The faint tremor in his hand eased as he lowered it from his temple. When he looked at her, the air around him seemed to dip — pressure and cold, the world itself bracing.

Her voice, light as it was, didn't reach him right away. He watched her instead — the fall, the way she landed like she'd done it a hundred times, the casual absurdity of her offering.

It almost — almost — drew a smirk.

"You fall from the sky," he murmured, voice low and rough from disuse, "and offer me food."

A pause. Rain filled it, hissing against the durasteel around them.

"Huh." His brow furrowed slightly, a fleeting crack in the calm. "…Interesting."

He took one slow step forward — measured, not threatening, but heavy enough to stir the air between them. The light caught his eyes then, twin embers burning in a storm-weathered face.

Silence lingered like fog.
Then, almost conversationally —


"Are you here to try and kill me?"


No fear. No curiosity.

Just a quiet, practiced question from a man who had long since learned that company and danger were usually the same thing.



 
Bane Kaohal Bane Kaohal

She fell from the sky and offered him food. Thos were his words. Was it a question? She wasn't sure, but she nodded all the same, looking almost like a princess out of a holoflick intended for children. He took a step closer to her, his own violence still not rising to the surface. That was interesting!

Scherezade extended her arm a lil more forward, her offer of food sincere. One never lied when it came to food. Not if they wanted to avoid royally pissing her off.

Was she there to try to kill him?

"That depends," she answered, voice all honesty now, "but probably not, unless you make me. I don't recommend that."

To show that her cheese cubes were safe, she used the Force to haul one out of the bag and let it fly into her mouth. Ohh, she should've thought of that earlier in order to avoid getting all that cheese dust on her fingers. Oh well. Live and learn.

"I appreciate someone who knows how to do violence," she said a moment later, "Big fan of violence myself."

The rain was still soaking into her hair and skin. She wanted to go somewhere… Well not necessarily warmer, but definitely dryer.

"But also a fan of not being soaked with rain," she added, "There's a shady cantina right behind you, we can go in and talk while we dry off."
 





C o n f l i c t e d


Scherezade deWinter Scherezade deWinter


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The rain hissed around him, neon bleeding off wet walls, flickering across his fiery hair, lighting his molten-orange eyes. Hood down, soaked and clinging to his back, he regarded her steadily, calculating, wary, yet intrigued.

He reached slowly for the cube of cheese, fingers brushing the bag, the dark mantle along his shoulders murmuring softly, a warning he ignored. He took it, chewing deliberately, eyes never leaving her. A slow, twisted smirk tugged at his lips. "Big fan of violence, huh?" His voice was low, gravelly, carrying dry humor. "…Interesting."

Shifting slightly, the wet fabric of his kama clinging to his frame, he measured her with a predator's patience. She did not flee. She did not falter. Bane's fingers tapped the cheese before he swallowed. "…You make… unusual choices, I don’t understand you….” he said, voice rough but calm.

His gaze flicked to the dim cantina ahead, neon above flickering in erratic pulses. He paused, cataloging the angles, exits, the scattering figures giving them a wide berth. Then he stepped forward, each stride purposeful, predatory. The dark mantle shifted across his shoulders, a ghostly whisper he barely acknowledged.

Rain slicked hair clung to his forehead, strands flickering like molten embers. He observed her with careful scrutiny—no deception, no pretenses.

Inside, boots silent on the wet threshold, he noted a booth cleared near the far corner and made for it, movements controlled, precise, coiled like a spring ready to uncoil. Once seated, he leaned back, arm along the booth's edge, amber eyes flicking, calculating. The Force hummed faintly around him, marking him as danger even in stillness.

He studied her across the table—posture, tension, the calm in her stance. Not fragile. Not timid. Not expendable. The acknowledgment passed silently through him, rare and fleeting. Jaw tightening almost imperceptibly, he finally spoke, voice low.

"You… aren't like the others," he said. "…why… me? Others see me and…. run, you… I don’t understand." His molten gaze held hers, piercing, measuring.





 
There was little Scherezade could do while the rain continued to soak into her, and the man's words making her just nod at all of his statements. "You make unusual choices," nod, "You aren't like the others," nod nod, "Others see me and run, you…" triple nods. That was good. He was already starting to understand her and they'd barely exchanged a handful of words at this point. Scherezade was a fan of quick learners.

But seriously, she was done with the rain. She was a person of eternal summers, bright blue skies, and big fields full of growing food and pretty flowers. It was almost like she'd been wrong into the wrong blood line. Or perhaps the perfect one.

"C'mon," she motioned. His eyes had never left hers and neither vice versa, but then she turned and walked towards the aforementioned shady cantina.

Inside stunk of cigarellos and other drugs that people smoked, alcohol that was just as likely to make one go blind as it would make someone drunk, and a lot of bad choices. In short, a place of perfection. Annoyingly though, it seemed that all the booths were taken.

Scherezde frowned before shrugging and leaned into the one nearest her, grabbing the two patrons who were there by the shoulder, and giving them a strong yank out. One of them tried to punch her in the process, so she let his friend go, using now both hands to twist his neck. He fell lifelessly onto the sticky and dirty floor.

And as though the last few seconds hadn't happened, she slid into the booth. The drinks they're ordered were still on the table, and she moved them off of it, like a cat and glasses of water on the counter.

"You can order anything you want," she grinned at Bane Kaohal Bane Kaohal as she passed him the menu, "my treat. I'm going to have a large pitcher of bantha cream and the biggest basket of bantha wings they have!"
 

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