Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private You Once Wore Red

PARVATI
Communing with ✦ Aren D'Shade Aren D'Shade
↳ Signal Confirmed // Your Eyes Only // Burn After Reading

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The soft hum of ancient processors filled the room, an unchanging rhythm that had become almost meditative after so many hours...no, days. Parvati hadn't left the terminal suite in longer than she cared to count. She was composed, as always, but the stillness around her had gained a certain weight. Not fatigue. Not quite. It was the pressure of obsession settling across her shoulders.

The monitor screens threw shifting lines of cold light across her face, refracting in the curves of her cheekbones and catching in the edges of her lashes like wire filaments. Blue, green, violet, data crawled across the glass in waves, painting her in the glow of endless queries, half-truths, and dead ends. She sat upright, poised, but even poised people eventually crease at the seams. There was a faint shine of oil across her collarbone, a smudge on one glove, an empty stim stick wrapper crushed beside the armrest.

She didn't care. Not yet.

She had been hunting Aren D'Shade- a ghost in the circuitry, a myth whispered, Parvati had heard the name in fragments: a transaction spike here, a flagged node there, system diagnostics that flickered and failed without explanation. Aren wasn't the sort of hacker that left a trail. She was the kind of woman who left voids where her footprints had once been. Dangerous and talented. Precisely what Parvati needed.

Another tool for the plan and another step forward. She would take back what was hers.

Information cost her dearly, from credits to favors. Even the most devout slicers on her payroll had turned up almost nothing. Not a face. Not an alias worth tracing. No safehouses, no known hardware signatures. She had begun to wonder if the woman even truly existed.

And then- a ripple.

A message board. Buried so deep in the Holonet it practically rotted in the dark. Obsolete protocols patched together with custom encryption, frequented only by paranoid geniuses and digital anarchists too stubborn to leave the past behind. Her droids found a pattern in the logins, something subtle. A repeated time signature. A non-standard routing key, it was barely anything.

But it was enough.

One trace led to another, and then came the rumor. Just a whisper, too fragile to verify, that Aren D'Shade had once served with the Sith. Parvati sat up straighter when she read it. Not out of fear or excitement but recognition. The galaxy was full of people who wore masks. Sith, Jedi, criminal. Some took theirs off and moved on.

Others kept them hidden, buried, locked inside, but they never really let them go.

Parvati didn't need the full story. She just needed the crack in the mask.

So she wrote something.

Not a threat nor an invitation. But a riddle made of implication. Buried like bait in a thread no one else would care to read. It wasn't addressed to Aren, but it didn't need to be. She would know. The tone, the precision of the reference, the digital scent, something in it was carved just for her.



[User: null.v0id]

[Post ID: #9851739]

[Thread: UOnceWoreRed]

[Timestamp: 03:47:12 // cycle_θ7]

---

they think you're clean.

quiet. sharp. untraceable.
but some masks crack under heat

and yours… flickered.
only for a moment.

an old reflex.

a word that doesn't belong in this timeline.

not a threat.
just a mirror.

if someone else saw it,

you'd have a problem.

maybe check the logs before someone scrapes them.

---


That had been days ago.

Now Parvati sat at the top of a ruined air traffic control tower, long abandoned by any authority worth naming. The windows circled the room like a crown- thick, reinforced glass stained with time. Through them, the broken skyline stretched far into the distance, a horizon of steel and silence. What remained of the city beneath was a sprawl of forgotten commerce and faded lights, its life now running through wires, terminals, and shadow trades.

She chose this place for its irony. Once a center of command. Now hollow and silent.

A small table sat at the center of the room, its surface immaculate. A glass of amber whiskey caught the fading light, casting long, rippled reflections across the polished floor. She sipped from it with leisure, her coat draped over one shoulder like a mantle. Beneath it, armor-threaded silks clung to her frame, elegant but functional, always ready.

Sable stood against the far wall, silent, cloaked in synthflesh and stillness. Her other droids had already hardwired the tower's network into a localized loop, rerouting any incoming signal attempts through recursive firewalls and synthetic decoys. If Aren tried anything clever, the system would bite back.

But Parvati wasn't preparing for war.

She was preparing for conversation.

The kind that only happened when two women who lived behind masks finally looked each other in the eye. And she was very curious what kind of eyes Aren D'Shade had these days.


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Mistress of the House ⛧ The Velvet Guillotine ⛧ High Priestess of Vice
 
A random blip, a message not to her on an old board, had caught the eyes of Aren. She knew it was meant for her, but she didn't know what it meant. Her old alliances were long dead, and she had thought erased. Lo and behold, there was a leak somewhere in the line, and Aren could only wonder where it happened.

She had been sitting on this for a while. The ID was as clean as her bathroom sink; the post was untraceable, but she could determine where it had originated. Reading the code as it cleared up before her deft fingers, she leaned back in her chair. It had taken her a few tries to get the answer, but she finally had it.

Wiping her mark away, the person who sent the message might know it had been seen. Nobody else would, and that is what mattered to the former Sith. Tapping her fingers against her teeth, she considered her options. How could she figure out who the person was? Eventually, she decided it wasn't worth the effort. An unwritten invitation was on the screen between them, and she was going to accept it.

The challenge was not getting bitten by the loops and rerouting programming. Learning that quickly, she got a ping and knew where she was going. This planet was her home, and she had been to many places. Not this one, though, but she could get close. Closing her eyes, she brought along everything she felt she was going to need. Everything was in the bag she lived with next to her body.

Appearing to step out of the woodwork, Aren fell into the step and movement of the people. Another face in the crowd, and she kept hers hidden from the cameras surrounding them. This was how she lived. Leaving no trace behind made it difficult for her to be found. Unless she handed her information to someone, it was kept private.

Getting the message, as she had indicated, her location remained secret. That would have been a horrible loss. However, the area she had gleaned from the scant information in the message brought her to stand outside of an old traffic control tower. One from another generation and would likely come down when the next generation built over it.

Parvati Parvati
 
PARVATI
Communing with ✦ Aren D'Shade Aren D'Shade
↳ Signal Confirmed // Your Eyes Only // Burn After Reading

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cffd8333ccc0712bfe891125fad01fd36da14f4b.pnj


She felt the moment before she saw it. A soft ping passed through the internal relay of the tower's system, not loud, but deliberate. It wasn't a probe, or a scan. Just a breath, slightly off-pattern from the usual background noise. Someone was approaching. Someone who knew how to walk quietly, and did so not out of fear, but out of instinct.

Parvati didn't move. She sat reclined in the cracked leather of the old flight chair, surrounded by quiet hums and distant electric whines. The monitors around her blinked in intervals, casting shifting shadows across her face, tracing her sharp cheekbones and the hollow under her eyes like brushstrokes. She wasn't tired, but she had grown still. Her fingers circled the rim of her glass once more before setting it down with silent finality.

The system below her began to respond.

At the base of the tower, doors that had remained sealed for decades groaned open with effort. There was no keypad, no prompt, just an acceptance of proximity, a coded allowance written specifically for one arrival. The kind of security that wasn't locked with a key but with intention.

The entry gave way to a circular chamber lined with old conduit and decaying wall fixtures. Lights embedded in the floor flickered weakly to life, guiding the path forward in dull lavender pulses. Remnants of a different time clung to the walls, glitched-out signage, static-choked holograms, fragments of language no longer widely used. It was a forgotten space, hollowed out by progress and left behind like a husk. Perfect, in its way.

As her guest stepped inside, proximity sensors cascaded power upward. A central lift, mechanical, semi-digitized, rumbled awake, the cables above flexing with age as systems routed control. There were no numbered floors, no directory. Just a single sigil glowing violet on the wall of the lift, a symbol lifted directly from the message Parvati had left behind. It was subtle, but intentional. Let her recognize it, let her wonder.

Upstairs, Sable stood like a statue beside the reinforced door to the command level. The synthflesh across her shoulders barely moved, but slight internal shifts betrayed activity, tracking the figure below, noting movement, calculating proximity. She made no move to interfere. She didn't need to. The droid was there to observe and, if needed, respond.

Parvati only stood once the lift was close. She adjusted her hair a bit, and smoothed her gloves, every motion fluid and exacting. She stepped forward with practiced ease, a silhouette cast in citylight, posture regal but not rigid. The upper chamber had once been a control center- now it was something else entirely. A room repurposed, reimagined, touched by deliberate hands and stripped of anything unnecessary.

The skyline stretched far beyond the fractured glass, dusk painted in bruised violets and deep reds. Below, the city blinked in silence, it hadn't noticed the tower waking up. It wouldn't notice the conversation about to take place.

As the lift doors opened, Parvati stood waiting. The mistress didn't smile, she didn't speak. Her gaze settled on the woman she had summoned- not with threats, not with desperation, but with a whisper left in code. Her hand rested lightly on the back of the chair she'd just left, the crystal glass behind her still half-full.

She let the moment hang.

Let Aren enter on her own terms. Let her decide how much of herself to reveal. Parvati didn't need to lead the dance, she had already chosen the song.

And she was curious, genuinely, quietly curious, to see what kind of woman came walking through the trail she left behind.


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Mistress of the House ⛧ The Velvet Guillotine ⛧ High Priestess of Vice

 
The doors opened with their hydraulics squeaking loud enough to be heard blocks away. However, there weren't any populated buildings in this district, and Aren didn't miss this detail. No matter, though, and the former Sith did not feel there was much threat to be had from whoever messaged her. Not messaged so much as left her crumb trail to follow that brought her here.

Thinking of that trail, there was an additional one to walk in front of her. Taking one step at a time, she found the lift and boarded it. It took her up past empty, hollow floors. A dwelling that once had a purpose but was a mere shadow of what it was.

Aren was not entirely fearless or foolish. If that were the case, she would have been caught long ago participating in something nefarious. Constantly toeing the line of legal and not, she generally fell on the side of not more often. She wasn't evil, though. At least, she didn't think she was. Based on the message left for her, the past she had so carefully done her best to hide, erase, and keep secret had been discovered. What the person wanted from her, she didn't know, but she walked slowly out of the lift.

Clutching her bag strap, it was about the only weapon she carried. Something heavy enough to stun most people if it connected with them. Whoever was waiting, she didn't think she would need to use it. Stopping as she came into the line of sight of the stranger, she stopped.

There was no threat in her stance, and she wasn't scared of what this encounter might bring. Maybe it was the Force or perhaps it was her intuition, but her hands still clutched her bag.

Parvati Parvati
 

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