Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Faction A Development on Harridan (DIA)


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Location: Dictator III “Triumphant” Command bridge
Tags: Gavin Vel Gavin Vel Veyran Solis Veyran Solis
Gear: Amulet of the Warden's Eye, Bladefather

Reign stood upon the bridge of the Triumphant. The Dictator-III cruiser was on a tour of the border systems, shoring up defenses and bringing new arms, ammunition, and manpower to the fringe planets.

He was on route to Harridan, to get a status update from Gavin Vel on his mission of bringing the planet in line.

He sensed that the Optio had interesting news for him and Reign looked forward to hearing it when he arrived in the following week.




 
Gavin was not entirely sure how to handle the situation he found himself in. The large brute sat across from the boy in silence, his dark eyes fixed on him, studying him carefully. There was no aggression in his stare, only curiosity and something faintly reflective. The boy could not have been older than sixteen, maybe seventeen, with a hardened look in his eyes that reminded Gavin far too much of his own.

He remembered.

He remembered the restless energy that once tore through his body, the way the Force had flooded him like a violent storm with no direction. He had been untrained and wild, a weapon without a wielder. That was before Kor’ethyr Academy, before the Diarchy, before Reign had found him and given him a reason to channel all that destruction into purpose. Where once his power had been a tidal wave crashing without restraint, now it was calm water, controlled, focused, and still.

He had felt the boy’s presence long before he had laid eyes on him. During the purge of Harridan’s criminal syndicates, Gavin had swept through the Ravagers like a storm. It was there, in the chaos and fire, that he had sensed something different. A flicker of power. Untamed. Raw. The boy’s Force signature pulsed like a heartbeat out of sync with the world around him. He was no soldier. Not yet. But there was potential, the same kind that Reign had once seen in Gavin himself.

Now the two sat in the back of a heavy transport rumbling through the streets of Harridan, its armor still scarred from battle. The glow of the city lights slipped through the slats of the viewports, painting brief streaks of gold across Gavin’s features as he finally spoke.

“We can turn you into something you never thought possible,” Gavin said, his deep voice filling the space between them. He didn’t raise it. He didn’t need to. Every word carried the weight of certainty. “Just like me. I was a wanderer with no clear direction. Now I am a warrior with a purpose.”

His tone was calm, deliberate. Gone were the impulsive bursts of arrogance and aggression that had once defined him. Reign had taught him the value of control, of using his voice as precisely as his blade. The boy needed to hear conviction, not threat.

Gavin studied the young man again as the transport jolted over uneven ground. The boy’s eyes had something in them. The was fire. Defiance. That, Gavin could work with.

“You remind me of myself,” he said after a pause, quieter this time. “I didn’t believe I could be anything more than a brute with a death wish. But Reign showed me that even brutes can be forged for something greater.”

The vehicle shook as it crossed into the fortified district, the lights of Diarchy banners glinting through the dust. Gavin leaned back slightly, still watching the boy. “If you want to live for something more than survival,” he added, “then this is where it begins.”

In his chest, he felt the faint hum of pride. Reign had once extended a hand to him. Now Gavin was doing the same.

Veyran Solis Veyran Solis Diarch Reign Diarch Reign
 
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Veyran said nothing at first. The hum of the transport filled the silence between them low, mechanical, and steady. It reminded him of the ships that had burned above Harridan when the purge began. The smell of smoke still clung to his memory, sharp as blood and metal.

He didn't look away from the man sitting across from him. Gavin. That was the name the others whispered the one who'd cut down half the Ravagers without breaking stride. His presence filled the cramped space, not through threat, but through gravity. The kind that drew everything toward it.

"You can turn me into something," Veyran repeated under his breath, more to himself than to Gavin. His voice was quiet, but it carried the rough edge of someone who'd seen too much too young. "You talk like that's a gift."

He leaned back, eyes half-lidded, studying Gavin the same way Gavin had studied him searching for cracks in the man's composure. There weren't any. That was what made him dangerous. Not the strength, not the armor. The calm.

"I've been something before." he went on, his tone caught between defiance and exhaustion. "The syndicates called me a weapon. My master called me a mistake. You—" His gaze flicked to the Diarchy insignia painted on the transport wall, then back to Gavin. "You call me potential."

He could feel it that faint hum at the edge of hearing, the same current that had once burned in his veins until it blistered. The Force. It stirred when Gavin spoke, not like the roaring chaos it had once been, but like a whisper testing his resolve.

Veyran's jaw tightened. "And if I don't want to be forged?"

The question hung in the air, sharper than any blade. He expected anger. Reprisal. But the man's stillness unnerved him more than any threat could.

Veyran looked away first, staring at the streaks of gold light sliding through the viewport slats. For a heartbeat, he saw himself reflected there smoke in his hair, blood on his knuckles, eyes that didn't look like a boy's anymore.

He exhaled slowly. "If this is where it begins." he said, voice low, almost lost beneath the rumble of the engine.

But the truth pressed heavy behind his words. What he didn't say what he couldn't say was that he wasn't sure whether he wanted to be forged into something greater…or simply to burn in the sun.

 

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