Caelia Lamora
Trouble
The elegant ship glided across the horizon, closing in on the distant red speck. Somewhere within the ship, the planet was up on a holodisplay, providing information simultaneously as it underwent new scans. There wasn't much to read. It was a desert world, a lost planet of the Sith, home to ruins and ghosts of the past.
It was a good thing ghosts didn't come equipped with turbolasers, as their ship would have handled that poorly. Sleek, elegant, fast - and not fit for war. It was a ship fit for a princess, or as was the case here, the daughter of a wealthy Duke. It was the way it had to be. Taking a war ship out of the Oroccan navy would've raised eyebrows, and Caelia wanted no one to know what she was up to.
Caelia emerged from her quarters, long, brown hair pulled back into a tight ponytail. For the first time since forever, she was not wearing a dress. Instead she opted for light-colored, loose-fitting pants, tailored to her every move. The encasing fabric felt peculiar against her legs, like rediscovering an old friend who had evolved in subtle ways over the years. Her top, a tight, long-sleeved turtle-neck, clung to her skin, an embrace of the breathable fabric that simultaneously offered comfort and restriction. It was a choice made not in vanity, but in preparation. A holstered blaster pistol adorned her hip, a small and slender thing, coated in silver. It was a silent declaration of the secret, perhaps dangerous mission that awaited her.
"Are we ready?" she asked the leader of the mercenaries about their preparations. She wasn't exactly sure what, if any, were necessary. Caelia had little experience leading military operations, and assumed these men had seen more combat combined than she might in a lifetime. She didn't want to disrespect them by telling them how to do their jobs, but they were here on her asking. Or at least on account of her bank account.
It was tough to say what awaited them down the planet. It had been populated once, now thought abandoned. Whether ancient predators had thrived or died out, she could not say. Hopefully it would be a quiet stop to a sunken temple, long forgotten.