Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Woe to the Witless

Nar Shadda was what he imagined Coruscant would be, if every single level was a lower level. Crime, betrayal, and cruelty lived lavishly on every inch of the rotting corpse of a world. Grisha hated it, code be damned, the place reeked. The Sith surely had plans in motion across the wretched world, the flesh trade, gladiator pits, and worse, to say nothing of the litany of crime lords that laid claim to the pieces of the planet.

He was no fool, Grisha didn’t kid himself into thinking he could make any real change on a world as lost as Nar Shadda, but he could try to at least make things a little better. One crime lord perhaps, or one Sith, either would do to win him back into the Master Sentinel’s good graces, surely. He could manage one, so long as he had his wits and his blade.

So he’d set out, clad in robes of white and gold, leaving behind his starfighter and astromech to roam the streets of the crime world, hunting corruption and evil. It didn’t take long to find the scent, a few pushers were spreading word of some arena fight set to occur that night. Bloodsport, murder for money, it was reprehensible, it was evil, it was a good start. One of the two had fled when he’d questioned them, the other pulled a blade after Grisha made it clear he wasn’t going to be buying spice from him.

He’d let the Zabrak off with a broken wrist in exchange for the information he wanted; the location of this arena, and an apology for pulling the knife on Grisha. Some part of him wondered if he should’ve done more, there was no telling when if the man might one day pull a knife on someone more ill-prepared to protect themselves. But he’d never killed anyone before, sure he’d disarmed plenty, and scrapped droids by the dozen, but he’d never taken a life.

Some half-starved spice peddler acting out of fear would not be the first he did. Grisha reminded himself that there was every chance the man might learn his lesson, change his path, and find the light again. There was hope for him still, Grisha had told him as much before he’d let them go.

When he came to the supposed arena, he was slightly disappointed. It was not a grand colosseum like the ones he’d heard tales of, it was just a bar with a few guards outside. The Gamorean and the Weequay who stood watch were thankfully not half as strong of mind as they were of body, and all it took was a simple wave and a touch of the force to gain entry.

The twin heavy doors slid open with a hiss, and the white-robed Jedi strode forth, the eyes of the patrons milling about the bar turning towards him for a moment, then returning to their drinks. The place was bigger on the inside. Beyond the bar was what he presumed was the pit where fighters would maul one another as the sort who enjoyed such savagery drank and watched. The mere thought made a wave of disgust roll over him, but Grisha shook his head with a huff and went to the bar, the long hilt of his pike hanging at his side.

“A water please.” He passed the bartender a credit chit, and in return, he received a scowl and the murkiest glass of water he’d ever seen. Grisha didn’t drink, he only looked down at it with confusion, then derision, his face tightening into a scowl. At least he wouldn’t be denying the locals any wonderful customer service when he turned this place into splinters. His hand went to his side, fingers nearly wrapping around the hilt, then suddenly freezing. Something, or rather someone, stirred the force, someone close.


 

The Demoness often didn't frequent such fight venues, not because she considered herself above them but she, for one, preferred larger pits to the more cozy ones and, for two, she brought in more money for everyone involved in scheduling a fight if she fought in the former. Plus, it was safer. More room to move.

The problem tonight and for the foreseeable future was that Iayn was on a blacklist for the stunt she had pulled in Taago the Hutt's blood dome a few weeks back. Every big name on the gladiating scene wouldn't even consider putting her on their card, but thankfully small-time outfits like this one would still consider her. If she kept doing well in these settings, word was bound to reach Taago. Hopefully, it would impress him and he would lift the embargo on her.

Ironically, she and Grisha were in similar predicaments. What was more, their solutions were similar.

She slid onto a barstool beside Grisha. "What's good?" she greeted both her new neighbor and the barkeep at once. Though she was intent on drowning the pain throbbing in her side in liquor, she had noticed how out-of-place Grisha looked. It had been a while since she had been on Coruscant and even longer since she had seen the Jedi Temple, but something in her memory recalled his uniform. The aesthetics struck her as Jedi, likewise pulling a raw memory from where she had worked it into the recesses of her mind.

For now, she would ignore both bad feelings.

"Something cheap," she added to the barkeep.

He immediately poured her a short glass of an amber liquid. Either this establishment invested in higher quality booze than water or simply treated its established patrons better than strangers.

As she reached over the bar to grab the drink, the two disk pendants on her necklace clinked against the glass. She rose it into the air. "Hysio'll take it out of my winnings."

The barkeep nodded.

She sat back down while taking a long gulp of the drink.

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
"Here? Nothing." Grisha answered the newcomer gruffly, setting the glass of murky water down with a scowl before fully turning to regard her. The force stirred around her; he could feel it move, but its flow differed from any he was used to or imagined. It wasn't dark per se, but it most certainly was not light. She was an anomaly, and it was impossible to tell if that meant she'd be friend or foe when he drew his saber.

Then, she kept talking.

Winnings she'd said, and more than that, she'd given him a name, Hysio. She didn't look like the gladiators he'd imagined. The woman wasn't half-starved with eyes full of fear, fated to serve no purpose but to die for the entertainment of others. She was strong, in the force and otherwise, and she certainly didn't look like anyone's slave. It was the necklace that caught Grisha's eye, the pendants upon them seemingly innocent at first glance, but as his eyes lingered, he saw them for what they were - horn burrs.

She wasn't a hapless pit slave, but she was who that sort were thrown against to die in droves. She was a butcher. Grisha felt his hands tighten into fists but called on the force to calm himself.

"Where is Hysio? I need to speak to them." Grisha asked both the bartender and the stranger, his dark eyes flicking between the two of them. At least now that he had the woman's measure, he knew who to worry about first when the fighting started.

 

"Here? Nothing."

She was inclined to agree, though her question hadn't really been looking for an answer.

Actually, Iayn wasn't dead and there were no slaves on the docket tonight, so at least there were two good things going for her in this bar, but that was all. The prospect of following the last lead she had gotten on her third burr was shelved until she could get her name reinstated. If there was one thing she hated more than slavers, it was fighting for fighting's sake. Though she wasn't the butcher that Grisha had just taken her for, she was a killer, but she tried to kill only her worst fellows. It was a personal code that those like him, steeped in their laws and righteousness, would most never understand, but it was enough for her, for she was part of a special breed of unhappy criminals who endeavored to be less cruel in a cruel world while still playing by its rules.

Trouble was, as much was nigh on impossible. Fighting fire with fire always caused collateral damage. What was the alternative? The sum of the rest of the galaxy's laws couldn't hope to shut down any facet of the slave trade down completely. Here in the niche that Iayn had settled back into, a slaver's slaves were never freed when their master died; they were just inherited by another, normally worse. In a way, it was good, as Iayn's work was never done, but it was also bad, for she hadn't yet gotten what she wanted: to smuggle a slave away from this place.

"Wow, you're a joy," she said, setting her drink down before turning to him as well. "He's busy. I..."

She was about to offer him help when a scene flashed across her aura: a series of blows, some deflected and one connecting with flesh; gushing blood; and a weapon discarded; images intertwined the echoes of two voices—hers and someone unknown's.

"I'm a bad person!"

"That's not the impression I got on Naboo."


The last, and admittedly first, time she had indirectly given a man that she knew was a Jedi what he sought, she had come away from it with another shattered reputation.

"I... think you should leave."

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
"So I've been told." Grisha was quite pleasant when he wanted to be, but that might've seemed impossible to Iayn, whom he practically bit off his word towards. Her hesitation and reflection seemed more like stalling in the mind of the overzealous Jedi, who, at that moment, could not hope to conceive of a deeper layer to the conflict. One was either good or bad; those who lingered in the gray were always fated to fall. His own failings in that moment, his insistence on absolutes rather than reality, did not occur to him. "Are they? I don't recall asking that. Just where they were?"

One hand slipped lower, finding purchase around his pike's hilt. Grisha thought of drawing then and there, but doing so would've been exceedingly dishonorable. He was not a Sith, or a Shadow, he did not have to stoop to cruel pragmatism. Grisha knew that he could accomplish his mission and still do things the right way.

"Should I?" Grisha challenged her suggestion, stepping back from the bar. "Why's that? Are you planning to make me?"

He would've bet everything that she was, in the few seconds they'd known one another, Grisha had already made up his mind about her. He was usually right after all, why would this time be any different?

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

Iayn sighed into her glass, which she had turned back to as he spoke. She was about to point out that Hysio would make her make him, but she thought better of it. She couldn't go refusing another challenge and she knew it. She took another drink.

She rose her eyes to look the bartender straight in his. "Scram."

He set down the vessel he was cleaning loudly on the bar and disappeared around a corner.

As he did, Iayn threw back to rest of her drink so, once they were alone, she could stand and turn back to the Jedi. At her full height for the first time during the encounter, she was almost a head shorter than him, and less clothed in her gladiatrix garb that was unfortunately popular with the scum that spectated blood sport, but the partially healed scars painting her thighs shades of reds and browns surely were to some degree intimidating. Her eyes watched him carefully for a beat, two, before she prodded at his mind.

:: I heard you, :: she mind spoke, still looking at him intently as if all she was doing was staring him down. :: I don't think you heard me. Go check on your high horse before it's stolen. ::

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
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Grisha’s stomach turned. He’d been in fights before, hard ones, but in the end the worst they’d been against were machines, or his fellow Jedi in the yard. The woman was wreathed in hard earned scars, she was a killer if there ever was one. It didn’t frighten him, she could’ve been the Dark Lady of the Sith and Grisha stupidly wouldn’t have balked, but he was smart enough that she gave him pause. Not smart enough to look for a better option though.

“Do you throw off the slaves they send at you that way?” He shot back, refusing to answer her mentally. “Worm into their minds so that they won’t fight back while you cut their throats?” Grisha knew she didn’t with all of her opponents, one didn’t become as bloodied as Iayn through easy fights. His fingers wrapped around the long hilt at his side, and pulled it free, though he didn’t bring the blade to bear yet.

“I only want Hysio, and for this place of senseless violence to fall. Tell me where they are, and I’ll see to it your sentence is light.” He couldn’t let her go, she was dangerous. She was a killer, if she remained free she’d only kill again. His mind was too fixated on the imagined situation to see the alternatives, but even his arrogance was not cruel or poorly intentioned.

“No one needs to get hurt in this place ever again. no.” His thumb hovered over the primary ignition, as he waited for her to move, his pristine white robes already stained by his brief time on the world.

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

When he made his accusation, her eyes widened, betraying for but a moment how much the words of a stranger had hurt.

She didn't want to answer, but not because she was at all concerned that one Jedi could bring any of them, let alone this whole den of iniquity, down.

One good thing happens to a relatively good person living on the wrong side of the law and she loses her edge. The road to hell was paved with twice as many good intentions along the one that Malcoma walked before Iayn had. The difference between the two women, though, was the mother knew how to keep her true colors to herself for survival's sake. She would have calmly answered Grisha's question and been content to see him walk off towards his doom, or at least grave humiliation, because he was a man that didn't matter to her mission.

But the daughter, beyond not sharing in Mal's misandrous tendencies, struggled to ignore small pictures for a better view of the big.

Her aura turned suddenly sincere, just as out-of-place as he was. Her voice remained in his head, as she couldn't risk the walls hearing her warning.

:: You'll make it worse. ::

Before he could challenge her further, should he want to, a series of what might be passed from her mind to his:

The neon flashes of a police hovercar's lights. A few of their uniform's shuffling in Hysio's office door, inspiring a feeling that might make Grisha's stomach turn again. They seemed to have come for him rather than the criminal. A slave handler followed after them, leading a woman in chains behind him. A glint of a butterfly knife in Hysio's hand.

When Iayn stopped the vision there, it wasn't for lack of imagination. It was a little white lie—there were no slaves here—but she knew that some poor soul would suffer for his arrogance elsewhere tonight. She had seen it in-person before.

:: Please walk away. ::

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
His hand seemed to freeze, the slight tremble in his thumb coming to a halt as she opened the door into his mind once again, and showed him the future. At least what she imagined it would be. It was a strange experience, like reliving memories that had never happened in the first place. It was surreal, disorienting, it forced him to stay still so that his mind did not become lost in the vision.

“Who says I go to the police here?” He countered after silence had hung in the air for a few heartbeats, the brazen edge of his words gone. “I could take them, I could-,”

Kill them.

Grisha couldn’t bring himself to say that part, not yet.

::I can’t walk away. This is wrong, and I have the power to make it right. What kind of person would I be if I just left?::

Finally he spoke back through the mental bridge rather than continue to shout aloud. If for no other reason than he didn’t want to draw anyone else to their brewing altercation. He tried to recall his lessons, to think about the Jedi he was supposed to be. Second chances were everything, right?

::You could help. You’re strong, stronger than anyone else here, I can feel it. You and I could stop it, together.::

He wasn’t much good at being diplomatic, but being honest came easily. The Jedi had no hidden agenda, no ulterior motive, only altruistic bullheadedness.

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

He was right on both counts, but there was nuance here that he was just missing.

Iayn looked quickly away, then back at him, eyes thoughtful. Just as he could feel that she was strong, she felt that he was good and, somewhere deeply below his brash surface, a kind of kind that she aspired to but was impossible to cultivate amongst the dregs of this pretty-entirely-worthless civilization.

:: We can, :: she replied, feeling Malcoma's disappointment even from the Core. The hapan rarely accepted help from those she knew, let alone strangers, but maybe the time had come for Iayn to follow her own instincts. :: We will, but not tonight. Not tomorrow. Not next month. There— ::

Distant footsteps called her attention, her gaze once more jumping from him to the corner the bartender had rounded to the bar itself, then back to him. :: —are things you don't understand and I can teach you, but you have to leave for now. I'll meet you wherever you want later. I promise. ::

She averted her eyes for good this time and slid a hand around her empty glass. Another montage swept over his mind, this one a stop motion warning of what was about to be.

Then, like an echo of momentum, she shattered the rim on the bar's edge and swung swiftly at Grisha.

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
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::Then when?! How many more have to die before the time is right? We can do this here and now-::

The warning was in a way, appreciated, but at the same time he found himself questioning why it was necessary. Why hide? Why wait? He could ignite the saber at his side and they could cut their way to this sleazebag’s office and take him down. His forearm came up, and his cheek turned, but Grisha miscalculated the timing. He blocked at her wrist, stopping the blow from driving the jagged glass into his face, but not from slashing a red welt across his unmarked cheek.

It wept tears of crimson, but Grisha did not balk at the sting. He telegraphed the counterstrike as well as he could, swinging brazenly for Iayn’s chin with a closed fist. Arrogance did not make him blind, and he was almost certain he saw the game she was playing.

::How convincing does this need to be?::

The Jedi backstepped, creating distance between them as the saberpike in his hand stayed idle. If she gave the word- or rather the thought, he could make the whole affair quite believable, if the trickle of blood wasn’t going to cut it.


::The docks, port 1029, tonight. Whenever this is done.::


He wasn’t take suggestions for a rally point.

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

Adequately alerted to his next move, she let herself get hit by it anyway—even exaggerating its effect on her. She stumbled back under force he had not exerted and bumped into the barstool she had not pushed in. It sent her falling back over it, glass still in hand and shattering further in it when she thudded to the floor. She was quick to get up and raise her fists, one dripping with blood flowing from where a shard had slashed her.

:: Up to you, :: she replied, mental voice a bit labored from physical exertion. :: Somewhere between this and spilled guts. :: She glanced at his saber. She wouldn't have to pretend if she got hit in the face with that. :: Broken a nose before? :: That would do it, make this convincing enough she reckoned. The bartender had probably noticed Grisha's lightsaber before he left. Iayn was one of the strongest pit fighters on Nar Shaddaa but it was far from common knowledge that she was a witch. So, in the minds of everyone here, she was outmatched by a Jedi. Still, it would be believable that she had muddled though a fight with one if she played her cards right with Hysio.

:: Pull on my necklace. :: Normally the chain would easily break away, to protect her from such a cheap blow by anyone lucky enough to get so close but stupid enough to waste their chance on such a move, but she would hold the clasp closed by summoning threads of sicky green spirit ichor.

She wasn't leaving room for disagreement either.

When he suggested port 1029, she gave an almost imperceivable nod. :: It's a date, Joy. ::

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
::Never on purpose, why?::

It took him half a heartbeat to realize the answer, but Grisha's grip around the hilt tightened as he did. She could make him out as fool, a the gallant Jedi too stupid to go for the killing blow on a pretty girl because of his delicate sensibilities. Grisha didn't know much about underworld sensibilities, but he had the feeling those who did would find a Jedi's folly rather amusing. Maybe she'd be able to use that. He swung the inactive hilt at her nose, aiming to bring the metal down on the bridge. He couldn't afford to pull the punch, so instead, he simply hoped that she had some way to take it.

The hilt made contact, and by her command, he reached rushed in closer. Whatever her plan was, Grisha knew whatever was going to come next would hurt, probably a lot more than he expected. But it was for the greater good, it was to stop the pointless bloodshed that took place beneath this rotting roof. So he'd deal. Grish reached out fingers brushing her throat as they wrapped around the necklace, and pulled hard.

:A date? Don't get ahead of yourself.::

The barb would've probably been funnier before he'd tried to break her nose.

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

In the moments before the pike connected with her nose, her lips parted slightly, making the transition to breathing through her mouth. It wouldn't steel her against the incoming pain but at least it would it would ensure that the aftermath was a modicum less uncomfortable.

The crack was also sickening. Her ears began to ring and she felt at once like she was falling standing up.

When Grisha yanked her towards him, she let out a distorted grunt which morphed into a half-strangled cough. His face had gone fuzzy with the tears prickling involuntarily at her eyes and the hints of red spreading in her peripheral vision across the bridge of her nose, but she rallied her remaining sense to look down. His elbow had floated up to grab her; she made a fist and stuck below it, hard, at his liver.

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
The pain was instant, severe, and it spread up his side like wildfire. It burned, and when he tried to gasp for air he found there was none to take in. Tears blurred his vision, and Grisha gasped as he stumbled backwards, nearly losing his grip on the hilt. The blow hurt like nothing else, he’d have to remember that for later. Maybe he’d find a use for it.

“Damn you.” He snarled, the faux anger made all the more real by the throbbing pain in his side.

“You rotten scum, I’ll wring your damn neck!” Grisha braced himself, gathering his strength and throwing himself forward, leaving his arms wide, his chest exposed.


::Kick me through the door.::

Force it was going to hurt.

::I can take it.::

Grisha prayed that wasn’t a lie.

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

The footsteps were louder, just around the corner, not that Iayn could hear them.

She leaned over and pulled one leg up towards her waist, then delivered a high kick to Grisha’s chest meant to send him back into the bar’s cracked front door.

:: I'll see you in a few hours. ::

Demoness?” Her tinnitus faded to allow her to hear Hysio right as he came around the corner with bartender in tow.

Don't worry, he came around to common sense.

The overseer gave a hearty laugh and extended a hand towards her. “Job well done, my dear. Go see an attendant…

The rest of their conversation retreated further into the building as they did.

Depending on Grisha's definition of a few, Iayn was on time. It would have been an even four hours had she not had to lose a tail of some sore losers whose bet had been overextending his punches.

She turned up in a simple set of street clothes—jeans and a flannel blouse—but that damned necklace still hung around her neck. The ends of a single, crude stitch towards the top of her nose bridge peeked out from between two butterfly bandages. Her nose was flushed, and her under eyes were puffy and purple with pooled blood, but someone had set the break pretty well. She cradled her right hand, wrapped in a grimy dishtowel, with her left.

Sorry about your side,” she said as she settled into a stance ten or so feet from him. Her sympathy might ring hollow to him but, then again, it was probably clear that if she didn’t mean it at least a little she wouldn’t have said it.

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
The night had not been kind to him. Apparently on the way in to the arena he’d had his pocket picked, so he had no money, and without money, Grisha had no food, no bed, and no way to pay the fine for his starship, which had been impounded. His stomach growled, his side hurt, and his pride was bruised. And she was late.

“It’ll be fine.” He grumbled as he pulled back his white hood, which had hung down over his eyes as he’d tried to get some rest while he’d waited atop a pair of shipping containers. The cut on Grisha’s cheek had been cleaned, but a red line was still clearly visible though unlikely to scar. He leapt down to meet her, casting a glance over the pit fighter and noting the change of attire. Grisha didn’t imagine anyone dressed how she had been by choice, or maybe they did, he was learning rather quickly that he didn’t know much of anything. The point being, she had changed, and he was still in the stained white robes.

“How’s the nose?” Grisha asked, though he could see well enough that it must’ve not felt very nice. He’d been under the impression that what he was getting himself into would’ve been easy. The Guardians went on rough missions all the time, knocking them out in short order and coming home no worse for the wear, even the newest of them. Was he just not much good at the job? Or had they been less straightforward in their approaches than he’d been led to believe?

Amidst the brief but awkward silence, a realization struck the young Jedi. “I don’t think we ever exchanged names, did we?”

Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

It’ll probably heal straight,” she answered, then:

Guess you need it for the incident report, huh?” She gave a short laugh, clearly finding herself funny. She knew that wasn't why he was asking, at least not as the only reason. “Iayn Dystraay. I-A-Y-N. I know, nothing like how it sounds. Two As in the surname.

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 
Wow, good one.” Grisha replied with a deadpan expression, his stomach growling loudly. Hunger pangs were joining the the needles that radiated out from his side. He eyed her nose for moment though, wondering if it really would heal straight, or if she was just trying deal with the possibility it wouldn’t. He decided it would probably be fine.

“Iayn,” He repeated experimentally. “Pretty name.” Grisha’s face tightened into a wince as he rubbed at his side gingery.

“Grisha Fletch, G-R-I-S-H-A, just like it sounds.”


Iayn Dystraay Iayn Dystraay
 

Aw, shucks,” she said, trying not to let her smile screw up her brow. She failed and dropped her face muscles into a more neutral expression, but soon a small, knowing look was back. “Have you eaten dinner?” She didn’t wait for his worded reply, for she had heard his stomach rumble. “There’s a Twi’leki place not too far. We could scoot over there, if you like that kind of thing—

Truth be told, it wasn’t her favorite type of food, but was prepared well and relatively cheap. Plus, fungus and cultivated mold were pretty well-packed with nutrition. The rycrit and mynock meat too, but that went for most cuts given they were lean.

—then stay or come back.” The latter was probably the smarter option. “You need protein to heal. My treat since I was later than intended and, uh, didn’t tell you I was going for the liver shot.

She shifted her weight to the other side of her body, then remembered her other promise. “It only feels like I’m stalling. We have the rest of the night to talk. No time crunch.” She put her good hand in a fist over her heart. "Gladiator's hon—" She stopped, dropped her fist, and cleared her throat.

"Iayn's honor," she corrected, hoping that as much was more acceptable. It was what she really meant whenever she swore on a gladiator's honor anyway: her gladiator's honor, the lesser evil ideal that drove her to do what she did.

Grisha Fletch Grisha Fletch
 

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