Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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First Reply A Walk Among the Tombstones




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Mandalore, Unknown Dead City
Southern Hemisphere

Local time: 1547 (Night-time)



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Mandalore.


The very word, the very idea of it, was foreign to most Mandalorians present in the galaxy. Long-standing feuds and foolish Empires and actions of traitors and enemies alike had largely turned Mandalore into something once pristine, once proud, into only a partially realized hellscape in some parts, a barren wasteland in others, and bustling metropolises and modernized infrastructure in others. But, it was a mixed bag of thinks, failed, realized, and oft-not materialized ideas.

And so, Fenn, in a fit of perhaps clarity and sanity, or the inverse, decided to walk among the tombstones of the past. Iron City, domed cities. Turbolaser scars, mining from the Sith, deep tracks from wars gone by. Civil Wars ten over, ancient dead lying feet below him. The recent Mandalorian Empire issued a rallying call, the Crusaders did the same. But they all felt empty promises. Temporary and not-lasting. He himself had seen it. The Enclave, the Protectors-

All failures, forgotten and empty vassals. Nation-states that promised unity and brotherhood, a finality, but in the end, they all shared the same fate: Being forgotten, fading away. He had no doubt in his mind that in time, this so-called Empire would suffer the fate. Just as the Crusaders did, and all those before in the entire time Fenn had been alive. Since the end of the Republic, Mandalorians came and went, promising this, promising that. Sole Rulers coming and Sole Rulers going, fading away or even being ignored. Claims to the throne that were righteous to some and false to others.

In the end, Fenn had a sinking feeling that he could not escape, that he could not shake from his tattered, fracturing mind:

That there would never be a return of his people. That they would forever be scattered to the wind. Each statement from the new iteration of the ones who lay claim to the Mandalore sector was largely the same. Come home, be together, fight under one banner, live, flourish. And yet, Fenn stood under the darkness of night on a forgotten city. It was lost to time, maps and navigational data useless on a planet bombarded every decade or so. The magnetic polarization was also thrown off with the volcanic eruption, causing no shortage of problems this side of the planet.

If he had to guess, the tomb that he found himself in that was once a small city, was subjected to Mia Monroe's devastation, one of their great many shames and acts of desperation. He was not yet alive for that, but it was hard not to feel compelled to be angry about it. He did not understand the plight of their people from such a length away. He had not been back to Mandalore in quite some time. Aether Verd was now leading the charge- what charge there was. He felt a sickening sadness coming over him, realizing how utterly, painfully alone he was. He tried to think of a single warrior he fought along with in the Enclave, the Protectors, whomever else that remembered his name, remembered that he was even alive. He could not think of a single one that he knew for a fact was alive and well.

And the feeling was largely mutual on their end, if they were in fact, alive. Even those he quarreled with, ideological differences of opinion, lay thrown to the winds of the galaxy. Scattered like sand on a beach- no longer united. Fenn crouched near a large pile of rubble and ash, a tell-tale rounded shape sticking out. The glass from the visor was long-gone, and only the shell of the helmet lay on the ground. Ash and volcanic material covered the helmet. But no skull inside, no body to be found near it, despite his efforts to reunite the long-dead brother with his helmet. Just another forgotten warrior, dead from eons ago. Forgotten.

Eventually, there would be another Mandalorian, combing through the tombs and forgotten cities of Mandalore or wherever Fenn was to meet his end. They'd hopefully take his armor back to the people, give it to those in need of it. But the thought, while comforting, made him sad. He did not think, even in a happy way, that he was to meet his end surrounded by brothers. He felt that he was to die alone, scattered away from the Mando'ade.

He stood tall, the winds going across the plains, valleys, and crystal structures jutting from the ground in every direction. A chorus of sounds, then silence. No joy, no laughter, no sharing of drinks and stories. No heating units from families gathered in warm homes, no ships darting to and fro this side of the planet. Only a handful nearer to where the Empire had finished their reclamation efforts. But not this far. Even some places on Mandalore were deemed not worth the effort... with how little of them remained. Perhaps one day, this place would be rebuilt. But as it stood, it was Fenn alone.

He took off his helmet, feeling the winds of Mandalore blow through his hair, caress his face. He sought comfort here, in the graveyard of his people, some semblance of belonging and an end to a great internal strife. And as Fenn stood alone underneath the stars, the blanket of night descended upon the graveyard of the Mandalorian people, Mandalore- he found no comfort. No solace. Just a great deal of sorrow, regret. He did not want to lose hope, he did not want to forgo the idea that one day, his people would return, old quarrels gone and forever etched into memory and not the present. But he felt it now-

The hate ran too deep, the Mandalorian people forever subject to the deadliest foes they could ever face:

Themselves.

So, Fenn walked more, through the dead city. Hoping to find something, or discover something to lighten his mood, to ease his troubled mind.

The silence was broken by Fenn's boots crunching along volcanic ash and rubble.




 
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At some level, Fenn wanted to kill him.

Rip him limb from limb, tear the intruder asunder. It'd be... doable. Easy, perhaps not, but Fenn had defeated Jedi and Sith alike before. And with greater stakes and less of an advantage, and in less of a healthy state than he was. He was not however, in the mood to fight. Something about this place and all it's death and destruction did not warrant combat. Even in the ancient battle circles of old, he had no wish to fight here. Mandalore was a destitute hellscape, a was-once of a has-been Empire. He took a deep breath as the figure approached.

Fenn didn't move in a hostile manner- he just kept walking. He stopped just out of arm's length of the Sith. He could've attacked him in a great number of ways, but he held his helmet calmly at his side, eyeing the intruder on their ancient lands. And strangely, he felt apathy more than he felt disgust or insult. The sad fact was that there was not much to be insulted for in this world of graves and ash.

Fenn looked him up and down, sizing him up. Fenn's eyes were predatory and callous. They were trained, practiced instruments of death as much as his hands. They sized up the Sith, and did not find him to be a credible threat. Fenn knew how to fight Sith, Jedi. Sith were more unpredictable at the least, but even the lowest Mandalorian was familiar with the basics of the lightsaber forms of their ancient foes. Therein lie the problem of fighting Mandalorians as one of them, a Sith or a Jedi.

The Mandalorians, despite being warriors, were also scholars of the wars gone by. Each battle a lesson, each war a course. And with each passing iteration, the Mandalorians grew more tenacious, more capable of slaying their ancient foes. This man was no different, but Fenn had little interest in crossing blades or trading blows or even shooting him a few times. Fenn walked further away from him, his back turned. A sign that he found him to be no threat, as well as identifying himself as not a man of violence... for the time being.

"Eons ago, my people, the Mandalorians, made the stars tremble. Not but a spare few months ago, we did the same. The galaxy gathered in fear, recoiled in horror by the Crusaders. And they failed to realize that the Mandalorians will never be strong again. Not Verd's so-called Empire, not the Crusaders, not the Protectors, nothing."

Fenn sounded defeated already, but he considered himself more of a realist than a pessimist.

"I came here searching for something. Perhaps I wanted a renewed purpose... or perhaps I'm searching for a way to cheat my destiny, my fate. Tell me, stranger- what do you know of where you stand? And why we stand on a dead world?" He finally half-turned to him, gesturing to the barren, war-torn landscape of Mandalore. Volcanic marks, nuclear impacts, radiation pockets- terraforming, strip mined, turbolaser batteries, burnt worlds. Orbital bombardment scars from wars past. Asteroid impacts. They rendered this part of the planet, and large swaths of it, forever uninhabitable, despite the efforts of the likes of Yasha Mantis- a sister, in a way. Aether Verd and others attempted, but even still, the scars remain on the body. Not enough time and not enough technology to undo the damage dealt to the planet.

Or perhaps, not enough care.





 



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For a while, Fenn was silent when the Sith spoke. He was right, in a way. Mandalore was a testament to resiliency, but ultimately a monument to failure. A monument of sin, betrayal and war. There was not much left on Mandalore besides ghosts and memories, and failed hopes and dreams and machinations of Gods and Monsters.

The Sith probed and prodded at his mind, but found himself scaling a smooth stone wall. Fenn, was a clone of Preliat Mantis- and thus, shared his father's lineage. A perfect clone of a more-perfect weapon. He wasn't even aware of the Sith's attempts to prod at his mind.

"I wonder what keeps the Mandalorians going. So much destruction, from the galaxy, from ourselves. Perhaps that's what I came here to understand." He crouched near another pile of rubble, ancient stonework collapsed under volcanic fury. He moved some rubble out of the way, pulling a piece of lumber out from the pile. He held it in his hands, wondering where it was cut from, how long it had been there, and how long ago trees had been on Mandalore, enough to build with, at the least.

"I used to believe I was an agent of change. That I was going to make the Mandalorians, or help, make them proud once more. To take back our sector, our people. Tell me, friend-" He gently placed the piece of lumber back, guilt washing over him for even daring to touch it.

"When you began your journey as a young man, how many friends and comrades did you begin with? I began with many. Now-" A silence, a pause. He did his best to try and count.

"I do believe, out of all those that took me in, I am what remains, and I alone. Such a fleeting thing, our lives."

Jak Meridian



 



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A mechanical hand was his answer. His left arm, free of holding the helmet, caught the arm of the Sith. He held it there, as if he always knew that's what the Sith was intending on doing. He took a deep breath, before turning his head towards the Sith. The knee came flying towards his chest, but all he had to do was step back slightly, and the knee came to meet empty space between them.

He let him disengage, and laid the helmet on the ground. Fenn took a deep breath, taking stock of the opponent. Roughly the same height as him- though Fenn stood only slightly taller, even in the armor. But the main difference was the weight difference. Fenn must've had at least forty pounds on him, if not more.

In the spirit of fairness, Fenn let the man back up, and held out his hands, before removing his crushgaunts. He flexed his bare fingers- save for the beskar-and-durasteel weave arm. He rotated his head, curling his fingers deep into his palm, forming a fist. Fenn let his arms down, before pacing forward. Then, a little faster, then, he moved faster still. And his body went towards the enemy- and met him head-on. Fenn went for a double-leg sweep. Fenn was a relentless killer, and effective at that. And he knew how to press his advantage. If he could take Hakon Fett on-

He wondered what chance the Sith had. Or if the Sith was more than he appeared to be. Either way, he did not pontificate any longer. He simply acted, moved. As he was trained and built to do.

Jak Meridian


 



The kick came and met Fenn's armored chestplate, and the Sith leapt into the air. Sith, while more unpredictable than Jedi, still suffered under the same training regimen. They were in that way, alike. Sith and Jedi did not deviate from their training regimens too often. He wondered if this Sith was nearly the same in his approach to training. It was time to find out for himself, that was for sure. The blow on his shoulder came down hard- hitting on both the armor plate and just where there was a gap. It sent a blunt shockwave through his torso, but no damage. His collarbone and shoulder blade was spared any cracks or breaks, and it only served as a dull slap. Fenn's thick physique absorbed most, if not all, of the blow's potential harsher impact.

And then, Fenn responded. With little fanfare, theatrics or care- he reeled his fist back and with an underhanded, rapid fire punch, sent it straight for the exposed gut of the Sith. His right shoulder was the one that was hit, so he responded in kind. His left arm, the mechanical marvel, remained in place to block. Perhaps, in an odd way, a kindness to the Sith, an adherence to equal footing. Because realistically- there was a strong possibility that with his beskar-woven arm, he could rip the Sith's arm out of it's socket, or worse.

So, his biological arm came screeching towards his stomach. Not his chest, not his kidneys, no the stomach. He wanted the Sith have all the air forced out of his lungs and suffer an agonizing few seconds. Fenn pushed aside the dull ache from his shoulder- it'd go away in a few moments, but he knew that anything involving his shoulder for a few moments was not going to feel good, or be as effective.


 



His punch did not meet beskar. It did not meet his chest. It met his metal arm. His arm whirred with mechanical fury, the beskar-weave catching his fist. He held it tightly, locked against the Sith's massive strength. Willpower and malice met training and persistence, tenacity and ferocity. He often forgot how much power the Sith and Jedi wielded- but he felt it, when the Sith pressed against his body with just a single fist.

It was a miracle that Fenn held it at all, but obvious why he shook when he did. A few sharp breaths out of his nose displayed his effort. His left hand held the fist from the Sith-

His right coiled behind him, tight and low at his hip. His fingertips curled into fists. He was not going to die here. He was not going to be slain by this Sith here. He had to fight.

He had to fight.

Maybe that was the point. Maybe that's what he was here to learn. Maybe this man wasn't even real. Or maybe, in some sick way, he wanted him to do something. He wanted to teach Fenn.

Or, he was trying to kill him.

"Who are you? Verd? Sith? Empire?"

And then, he lashed out, before he could answer, aiming to drive his free right hand straight into the stomach of the other warrior.


 

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