Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Faction A Grave Rift in Space || ME




| Location | Hardlock Station, Thanos System, Taldot Sector

The spectre of Hardlock Station loomed over the surrounding absence, a grim silhouette shrouded in a veil of shattered celestial fragments that drifted between the carved-out remnants of jagged and twisted routes left to ill repair over centuries of hardship and a hatred for visitors that was carved into its very existence. A prison, not for the worst, though it certainly held many of them, but rather for those without the bonds that would endanger the ancient station. It cared not for the wars that had stretched across the Galaxy, nor the crimes that were levied between different factions, eager to tarnish their enemies in the mud and dirt, but rather the station cared only for the sins of those distant from such murky waters.

Every cell harboured a soul tarnished with a crime not against the strong, but rather the weak, the downtrodden. Such was their punishment, brought deep into the void, where their screams would be unheard and their existence forgotten. These were not the heroes and villains of great empires, destined to be recovered in an epic escape. They were the scum that lingered in the background, a disdainful reminder that even without the factions that would tear apart the Galaxy, that darkness would remain.

Under the circumstances, it had only been a matter of time before that darkness became something a little more substantial.

Sealed away, darkness does not vanish; it festers.

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| Location | Hardlock Station, Thanos System, Taldot Sector

The sleek nosecone of the IR-3F-Class Light Frigate pierced the shimmering veil of hyperspace, as more of the vessel tore its way back into reality. Subspace engines roared to life, rapidly gliding towards their destination. Unhindered by the asteroid field that surrounded the station, the ship continued onwards, expertly weaving between floating debris and the concealed fragments of an inactive security system that judged silently. As the frigate entered a well-defined passage that spiralled inwards, drawing the ship closer to the blackened heart of the region, even as, behind it, fragments of rock and rusted metal settled like closing gates.

Attached to the central control terminal, an astromech beeped and whined with each drifting manoeuvre from the pilot, sat only a few feet away and covered in a layer of beskar that concealed his thoughts of the droid's frequent reports. His hands moved, steady and sure, guiding the vessel forward despite the debris that surrounded them, only a single mistake away from crashing into the deflector shields.

With a flicker of his attention, the Mandalorian turned to the comms system, adjusting the frequency in search of an open comms that even after a couple of minutes failed to respond. He tried again, drawing a worn groove into the nearby switches with each twist of the dial that creaked off into silence.

Utterly alone, his ship continued to fly across the void, undisturbed by the security systems that should have flagged his vessel.

Beneath the transparisteel of his visor, Itzhal glared into space, his fingers tightening against the control stick of the IR-3F until he felt something squeak in displeasure. The fabric of his bodysuit rustled with the release of pressure, shifting back into place as the nerves and muscles beneath grew less defined with the sudden looseness of his grip.

Continuing on the straight and narrow, the sleek vessel prowled through the void with only the most minute adjustments to guide it towards Hardlock Station, where the singular entrance of the prison gaped open, the atmosphere within conserved only by the faint glow of a ray shield that the IR-3F slipped through. A bird of prey loomed over the hangar bay and the abandoned forms of prisoner convoys and shuttles, their missing occupants all the more noticeable as the ship descended with a hushed whisper of displaced air and the whump of landing gear.

Sitting in the comfort of the pilot's chair, Itzhal stared out into the hangar bay, his eyes trailing across discarded fuel tanks and the husks of inactive ships ready for takeoff, their pilots nowhere to be seen. He leaned forward, hands pressed against the side of the control terminal, searching for something amongst the gloom of the hangar bay, weakly illuminated as it was by flickering lights above.

"L4, set up a distress beacon and prepare a report of the situation," Itzhal commanded, flicking through the final steps of disembarkment, despite the hiss of worried beeps that followed his command. "I know. I don't like it either. Still, someone has to investigate."

Quiet footfall followed him throughout the ship, manned only by a single Mandalorian and the few droids that he was able to purchase. He'd grown used to the relative silence, an expectation of his home, suddenly disrupted by the looming absence that awaited outside. The landing ramp hissed open with a burst of pressurised steam, white smoke whisping around his frame, the Mandalorian descended, his hands held close to his waist and the comforting weight of his blaster pistols.

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"Okay, so, we go in, we save the survivors, and we leave." Alora planted her hands on her hips. "Easy plan."

"Yes, if only rescue operations were so straightforward and totally didn't require effort to find the survivors and then recover them from whatever afflicted the station,"
Gambit's disembodied voice sarcastically replied.

Alora turned away from the closed ramp and stared up at the ceiling. "It'll be that easy if everyone works together, Gam. So, that means you staying put and not wandering off afraid of strange computer systems."

"The immediate area appears clear,"
Gambit replied plainly in response.

After a quick preen and check on anyone else that'd tagged along in pursuit of a distress beacon, Alora lifted her helmet up to set it atop her head. "Well, no time like the present." She turned around and drew both of her disruptors. "Open up, Gam, and let's get to finding people in need." And hoping they'd pay a proper rescue fee. Or they'd get some really cool salvage rights if there were no survivors, but one didn't say that out loud.

The Gambit had set down in the hanger bay off to the side of where Itzhal had parked. Its rear loading ramp began to lower to allow those in its mechanic bay to stroll out onto Hardlock Station.

A curious place this station. The galactic map had apparently lost track of the Thanos system during the Planeshift; fortunately the Station's location in the Taldor Sector remain known (especially correlated with the other planets of the Taldor Sector). It was tucked away in the Southern-most reaches of the Mandalorian Empire near Black Sun and Confederation space. Quite the place for a rescue op to mount. A lot of people could be behind the trouble, and any rescuers could be in peril just by being in the area. A trap, to put a pin on it.

Alora strode down the ramp and onto the station. She slowly panned and scanned the interior of the bay for a moment. "No signs of hostile contact." No surprising since Gam had already done a sweep himself. Then again, there were weird things in the galaxy that didn't show up on sensors. "Anyone friendly nearby?" she called out, curious if the owner of the other ship were still nearby. Maybe on the otherside of his ship. If there was no answer she'd just have to make for the interior of the station.


 

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Open Space || Hardlock Station
Tags: Itzhal Volkihar Itzhal Volkihar | Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla | Open



The Force twisted, gnarled, and gave off a rotten feeling. Adelle checked the navcomp before manually reverting from hyperspace, reaching out with the Force to time it just right. An asteroid field floated a few klicks away from where the Tome'tayl'kandyc appeared. The festering wound in the Force lay inside, something putrid oozing out all the way out here. Adelle sat back in the pilot's seat for a moment, staring at the field. She had no idea what lay inside the field, no idea what was causing the rot in the Force. Entering the asteroid field was almost certainly a death sentence and all for what? A vague, uneasy feeling in the Force that would make most people look at her like she was crazy.

Then a distress beacon pinged. Coords.

Phantom leapt up to the back of her chair from a copilot's seat, chirping something inquisitive in her ear. Adelle sighed then eased the acceleration up, guiding the ship into the field itself. If ever she'd had a bad feeling about something, this would be the definitive moment. Flying more by Force and sense than sight, she wove between the massive space rocks, some as large as whole cities. Among them were smaller rocks--and smaller structures. Adelle squinted at one of the structures. It was some kind of defense mechanism, pointed inward instead of outward. She ground her teeth but continued on.

Many more asteroids and dormant security implacements later, she finally got visual on what the security's focus was: a gunmetal durasteel station with faded and scratched letters on its side. Hardlock Station. A prison. She'd heard of it but hadn't realized she'd been close to it. The distress beacon's coords matched with the station's. Adelle clenched her jaw and then forced herself to relax, flying her gunship to the station's only hangar.

The sickness in the Force only grew.

Several abandoned ships sat inside the hangars but two gave off heat signatures and her sensors logged recent fumes from engines. The distress beacon's location matched to one of the ships. So someone was alive here. Adelle couldn't tell if that was better or worse than finding the ships entirely abandoned. She let the ship settle on its landing gear, cut the engines, and let things breathe for a moment, watching what parts of the hangar bay she could see from the cockpit. Curiously, she could see an armored figure standing just off of a ship's ramp but couldn't feel them in the Force ( Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla ). Phantom leapt up onto the console to peer out the window herself. Adelle gave her head an absent-minded rub.

"Stay here, stay hidden," she said softly, before heading down the ladder to arm up.

Adelle left the gunship through its side entrance, blasters, blades, and lightsaber all in their proper places. She still hadn't gotten used to using the beskar'gam's weaponry itself. The silence in the hangar felt heavy, eerie, and the rot she felt in the Force was magnified and layered with a haze of dread. It made her shudder. Adelle approached the ship she'd seen the armored person outside of, looking around for them.

"Hello?" she called. "Did you activate the distress beacon?"



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Alora turned her head in the direction of the voice. The barrels of her guns still pointed at the ceiling in both hands. Not that she didn't trust a good, old fashion place of incarceration. It was more the people inside it she didn't trust.

"Nope. Here to see what the play is." An she totally called dibs on salvage. "Seems pretty quite out here so far. Not a good sign. Lack of extensive damage outside means it's really, really not a good sign. Your suit has bio-filters right? Spare air tank? Seals?" Alora paused and gave Adelle Bastiel Adelle Bastiel 's suit a look over. "Just in case." Well if someone hadn't shot these people to death from outside that meant something inside. Virus? Chemical weapon? Insider disabling life support? Ghosts? Too many possibilities to count and they were all extremely bad.

"So, uh, guess we should find the command center. Someone had to leave a log of what happened, and the most informed ones will be up there." Not that Joe Engineer might not have left a recording of panic, but they probably hadn't been given reports from wherever the threat began being they were Joe Engineer. Now, if they found out this place was about to explore maybe that panicked log would have some useful information about why the reactor was going to explode or something. One crisis at a time. Hopefully the reactor was fine though.

"Oh, I'm Alora, by the way. Who are you?"


 


| Location | Hardlock Station, Thanos System, Taldot Sector

One hour earlier

Itzhal's footfalls hammered against the harsh metal surface, each step loud, like the beat of a consistent heartbeat. He stood alone in the lifeless stretch of thruster-burned steel and sprawled cables that stretched between abandoned vessels, their forms raised high on the pedestal of eroded landing gear, the surface layers peeled back, scratched and worn over centuries of use. A cold layer of frost lingered upon dull plates, barely illuminated by a dim flickering light above, creeping closer to the inevitable slumber of a final night.

The seals on his armour and the warmth of his bodysuit kept the gnawing cold from his skin, icy daggers scrabbling without purchase in a silent wind, undisturbed by the hazy sound of Itzhal's breath. Ghosts haunted his steps, disturbed by the sound of the living that even with all his training and experience, the Mandalorian could not stall. Not when death had rejected him. A revenant of the past, forever cursed with the duty of continuing onwards for all that would never see another sunset.

With a click that pushed the activator switch into place, Itzhal opened the door with a rattle not unlike the shaking of wary bones, forced to rise upon another day of hardship. His own body ached in shared remembrance, the wounds of a dozen memories sealed into skin. Itzhal stepped past, over the stalled lower plates, into the gaping maw of darkness that awaited him.

Absence was his greeter, and it was plentiful.

A lonely corridor stretched beyond the horizon, barely illuminated, even with the flicker of the low-light sensors in Itzhal's helmet, which turned the world a dull, bitter shade of grey. Above his head, turrets dangled without purpose, attached to their ports, yet inactive in the hollow death of unliving things. Wary of the silence, the Mandalorian prowled past them, watchful of the dire sentinels and their sightless gazes that, despite his fears, never once awoke from their slumber.

Minutes vanished in the endless darkness, undisturbed by the prisoners who should have hollered and screamed, their voices carried through the cramped ventilation shafts and the worn seals of doors branching off the corridor he found himself in. None of them did. Silence was his only companion.

As the corridor stretched towards its end, it culminated in an imposing wave of contorted steel that resembled a colossal blast door, its surface marred by the scars of time and shattered souls. Its towering presence loomed, a reminder of the insignificance of a single man and a celebration of the countless others that it had broken within these tortured walls. It cared not for Itzhal's presence, unshaken by his arrival; no power existed to rattle it open, nor would it bow to his strength, meagre as it was.

Yet, even titans could be bled, and as he looked upon the surface, he lingered upon the sharp tear of a corner, where pistons and hydraulics lay spread across the joint like exposed tendons, larger than a man. With only a quick look behind him, Itzhal stepped forward and slipped amongst the mechanisms, their crushing strength held back only by their inattention, as the lonesome Mandalorian found his way through to a gap on the other side.

An array of dusty terminals greeted him, untouched in what looked like years, yet should have been only weeks.


 


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Tags: Alora Vizsla Alora Vizsla | Itzhal Volkihar Itzhal Volkihar



The taller armored individual turned to face her as she answered, rather rapidly. More curiously, Adelle could feel nothing in the Force where they stood. Not a vacuum, just . . . not there. She'd encountered her fair share of Force dead beings but none so . . . humanoid. Adelle couldn't give more thought to it because the other woman fired off an introduction and asked who she was.

"Adelle Bastiel," she answered simply. Alora had brought up something she should have considered sooner: her durasteel beskar'gam wasn't rated for space exposure. Viral or bacterial agents, yes; chemical agents, sure. But a vacuum would leave her dead. Or it would if she hadn't been a Jedi. She could enter a hibernation trance if given even a marginal warning. "My armor will suffice."

The hangar around them seemed empty but another question arose: who piloted the other ship? And were they still alive?

"Logs and maybe even surveillance recordings would be incredibly useful, yes," she said. Adelle pulled her WESTAR-34 pistol from its holster, leaving her left hand empty in case she needed her lightsaber. "I'll watch your back, you watch mine? We'll make for the command center."

The silence settled around them uneasily. Adelle hated it.



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Alora nodded with Adelle affirming their armor would suffice. Well, wasn't her place to interrogate another Mandalorian over what 'suffice' meant. Their life, their responsibility. Something went horribly wrong, well, Alora had a cybernetics lab on-board Gambit and they'd just replace whatever was broken -- provided they survived.

"Is that an actual WESTAR-34?" Was that really important? Well, objectively no, but subjectively yeah! It was like the grandfather to her very own designed and built AVZ-99Ps. Not that a 34 couldn't do its job. Disruptor still disrupted. Sure, Alora had tweaked some things, but she was just amazed to see one of those in such good condition. Were they still in production somewhere?

A slight clearing of the throat followed. "Command Center. Let's go." Probably should get down to business then. She set off toward the door taking one side to clear the opposite side's corridor, and waited for Adelle to come do the same on the other. Only when an ambush right outside the hanger was ruled out did the non-traditionally suited up warrior roll around the frame and into the station proper.

"We'll stay in contact, let each other know if we detect any signs of life, signals, or anything else that might suggest someone still alive." Unnecessary statement? Alora hadn't worked with Adelle before to know. Always best to assume anyone new you were working for didn't know already until they said they did. Especially when your life was on the line.


 

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