Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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First Reply An Idea Instilled | Iskadrell


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An Idea Instilled
Iskadrell
Tags: Open

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Kiba no Shimai

At many points in history, the Iskalloni of Iskadrell were known to send slave raids to other systems. The order that the Galactic Alliance brought to their region of space hampered such raids, but with the Galactic Empire now ruling the core those who remembered the old ways were eager to resume their raiding where they had left off. One freighter made the first journey into the war-torn remnants of what had been Alliance space, the first raid in years. It now rested in a snow-crested clearing, surrounded by trees. What they returned to wasn't an eager band of savvy businessmen looking to profit. Instead what they were met with was death.

Roten had grown to detest the ilk he had been raised by, alongside a healthy resentment for his own actions. He couldn't simply excuse it by the fact that he had been a child. Even so, he still distinctly remembered being told he would never be a Sith by Lord Kalrath Lord Kalrath . The ancient being was frustrated, particularly by the way Roten chose his battles. He wanted those he killed to give him a good fight and die with honor. Kalrath called it weakness. Told him he had a softness in his soul that could not be removed. And idea instilled.

The Jedi had shown him that he may actually be what Kalrath had stated. Roten was certain he wasn't, and yet there was a strange urge in him he could not deny. What had given him such a weakness when he was raised by those who gave others no quarter? Why hadn't he been able to senselessly slaughter like his mother had?

Why could he only take life when they held a weapon in their hands?

The walls of the slave freighter were coated in streaks of blood. A trail of blue-skinned cyborg corpses were left in the wake of his blades, strewn about the ship haphazardly. Methodical randomness, systematically performed to ensure total annihilation. Roten had no pause with these men. They carried weapons and fought back. That was the life of a warrior. When the crew had been dismantled, Roten opened the door to the frieghter's cargohold. There must have been twelve or thirteen individuals. Several elderly, a few young women, two wookiee brothers in binds... and children. The Bursantian looked on at them with his piercing red eyes, his fur spotted with blood. Some still dripped freshly off his blades. When he saw their fear, he was angry at himself. It was that weakness again, the thing in his stomach making him feel guilty. Why did he have to have that thing in him?

Roten threw out an EMP grenade. The shockwave fried the slave's bindings in an instant, releasing them.

"I hotwired the control pannel," he told them in a blunt, cold tone. "Fly yourselves to safety. I left coordinates in the Navi-computer for the nearest High Republic planet."

The Republic was close enough to the safe space the Galactic Alliance used to be. That was probably their best option. Roten didn't give any of them a chance to say a word before he turned away and departed the vessel. He couldn't talk to them.

The Bursantian didn't have the heart to hear the voices of the children.

The former pirate sat himself down outside the vessel, leaning back against a tree. It took a few minutes for them to actually get it started, no doubt due to being in shock. Before long the freighter picked itself up and raced towards the planet's upper atmosphere. Roten let out a sigh, his gaze shifting back to the ground.

"The hell am I doing with my life..." Roten muttered to himself.

And why couldn't he stop himself from acting this way? That weakness Kalrath saw in his heart lingered, wrapped around his chest like the roots of a tree around a stone. He was supposed to be a survivor. That wasn't survival. That was charity. Why should he care if others couldn't fight their own battles?

Yet, he did care. It contradicted everything he had ever known. He shouldn't want this. Why couldn't he just act the way he had been raised to?

That would have made everything so much easier...


 
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Stripped Dreams - Marilyn Manson / Depeche Mode / Tove Lo (Kill_mR_DJ Mashup Remix)

Tag: Roten Roten

Dankaia's ship slipped from hyperspace like a thought exhaled too slowly, stars smearing into clarity as the planet Iskadrell filled the viewport. The world was a lattice of metal and stone; ancient cities fused with living circuitry, continents scarred not by war alone but by deliberate augmentation. Tower-spires glimmered with cold luminescence, and beneath them she sensed motion: ordered, efficient, restrained.

Rumors of a slave trade clung to the planet like static, and as her sensors drank in encrypted traffic and power signatures that didn't want to be seen, her jaw set. Iskadrell was beautiful in a hard, uncompromising way, and the ugliness hiding beneath its surface felt like a wound someone had tried to cauterize with lies.

As she descended, the Force stirred, not loudly, but insistently; guiding her attention toward the cyborg species who called this world home. Their presence felt fractured yet resilient, minds braided with machine logic and organic will, survival made sacred through necessity. Dankaia felt a kinship she hadn't expected, a resonance born of adaptation and quiet endurance, and the old instincts of her Jedi days surfaced like muscle memory.

This wasn't just investigation; it was obligation. The rightness of acting pressed against her ribs, steady and undeniable, a byproduct of vows she no longer wore but had never truly abandoned. Whatever chains were being forged on Iskadrell, she would find them; and break them.

Dankaia stepped down from the ship's lowered ramp into a clearing carved from the forest like a held breath, the engines' fading hum giving way to the whisper of leaves and the distant click of unseen mechanisms. Towering trees rose around her, their bark threaded with faint pulsing moss, roots gripping the soil as if anchoring themselves against time itself.

The air tasted old, charged with memory, and she could feel it in the Force: echoes of habitation, laughter dulled by years, footsteps that no longer pressed the planet's surface. Somewhere within this forest, a small village had once nested in the canopy and undergrowth, its absence louder than its presence, the silence shaped by loss rather than peace.

She adjusted her cloak and let her senses reach outward, methodical and patient. Slavers, she knew, always hunted where defenses had thinned and hope had been left unattended, and places like this; forgotten, half-swallowed by wilderness, were ideal feeding grounds.

Fact and fiction tangled here, rumors growing like vines around old truths, and this clearing felt like the first loose thread. Answers waited in the shadows and broken paths ahead, and with a quiet exhale, Dankaia took her first step into the forest, not as a wanderer, but as an investigator at the beginning of something that would not remain hidden for long.



 
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Roten didn't linger on the ground for long. A few of the slaver's dead remains were left where their ship had once been. He stood and began to gather them up, piling them up with logs and tinder. They were certainly scumbags, but he wasn't one to desecrate the dead. The Bursantian snapped his teeth together and spoke the runic words for fire, conjuring a spark in his mouth that he exhaled out onto the newly formed pyre. He stood and watched the blaze for a moment, reflected in the crimson pools of his pupil-less eyes, before he returned to his original place under the tree and procured a rag. Meticulously, Roten then began to clean the blood off of his kunai.

All the while the former pirate listened. He took in every sound, his ears honed by millions of years of evolution for hunting. Distant sounds of footsteps entering the forest. Roten didn't leave his spot, however, He simply remained put, continuing to clean his blades.

Maybe with luck he wasn't gonna have to fight anyone else today.


 








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Stripped Dreams - Marilyn Manson / Depeche Mode / Tove Lo (Kill_mR_DJ Mashup Remix)

Tag: Roten Roten

Dankaia slowed and came to a measured halt a few meters from the village's ragged edge, the hum of her passage fading into the cold air like a held breath. Beyond the leaning silhouettes of dwellings and mechanical-styled towers, black smoke twisted upward in slow, violent spirals, bruising the sky with the unmistakable mark of fire. It was not the clean plume of industry nor the careless burn of travelers' camps, but something wounded and angry, as though the land itself were exhaling pain. She felt it then, a subtle pressure along her senses, an echo that tugged at instinct rather than reason.

The rumors that had drawn her across the galaxy stirred uneasily in her thoughts, threading themselves through the sight of that smoke. Slavers left scars, not just on flesh and steel, but on places; villages hollowed, lives reduced to ash and silence. Dankaia remained still, listening, letting the moment speak before she moved again, knowing that whatever burned there was no coincidence. Fire was a language, and this one was calling for witness, for judgment, and perhaps for intervention she could no longer pretend to avoid.

Dankaia made her choice with the quiet certainty of one who had learned the cost of hesitation. The fire would wait; fires always did. The village, however, held the softer truths; the kind that vanished if left too long in the open air. She crossed the remaining distance with careful steps, senses stretched thin, her attention divided between what she saw and what pressed faintly against her awareness.

Whatever the smoke promised, the village was the first chapter, and she would not read the ending before understanding the beginning.

The settlement lay empty, its silence louder than any alarm. Doors hung ajar, personal effects scattered where lives had been interrupted mid-breath; tools abandoned, scorch marks crawling up stone and metal walls, and dark impressions in the soil where bodies had been dragged or fallen. There was no blood left fresh enough to speak plainly, only the stale aftertaste of terror, of violence executed with purpose.

Dankaia felt it settle in her chest, the unmistakable sense that this place had been harvested, not destroyed, and that something deliberate had passed through and taken what it came for.

She turned then, orienting herself toward the distant smoke, and stepped into the forest's shadowed embrace. The trees closed around her, branches whispering against one another as if conspiring, and with every step the air grew heavier. She was no longer alone, not truly. A presence lingered nearby, patient and aware, perhaps watching as she advanced. Dankaia did not quicken her pace nor reach for a weapon; instead, she followed the pull of that unseen regard, convinced that beyond the fire, within its blackened heart, the answers she sought were waiting for her.

Dankaia paused before the pyre, the flames gnawing at stacked bodies until flesh, armor, and cloth alike surrendered to drifting ash, the fire hissing softly as though resentful of witnesses. Through the Force, a prickle crawled along her spine; attention focused, deliberate, coming from behind her with neither haste nor fear. She did not turn. and said, dry and unflinching,
"You know, it's not polite to stare. Rude, in fact."




 


Dankaia paused before the pyre, the flames gnawing at stacked bodies until flesh, armor, and cloth alike surrendered to drifting ash, the fire hissing softly as though resentful of witnesses. Through the Force, a prickle crawled along her spine; attention focused, deliberate, coming from behind her with neither haste nor fear. She did not turn. and said, dry and unflinching, "You know, it's not polite to stare. Rude, in fact."

"Are you joking?" Roten scoffed. "I was here first. You walked into my line of sight."

A low exhale escaped his chest as he turned his gaze back down, continuing to clean his blade. Some people really were so self absorbed. Now he just had to figure out what was up with this random person that had wandered up on him. He wasn't exactly sure of their intentions.

"Nothing out here anymore," he stated bluntly. "You're late to the party. Not sure what you were expecting."


 

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