Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Private Awakened Ruins

The world of Horuz exhaled dust.


A muted bronze sky stretched overhead, heavy with storms that had raged for centuries, unbroken, unrelenting. Beneath it, the remnants of an old Imperial installation sprawled across a jagged plateau, metal and stone twisted into grotesque shapes by neglect and time. Towering spires had fallen like titans in their sleep, their ribs jutting skyward as if trying to claw back the stars. The air was thick, tasting of old ozone and the faint, metallic tang of rust.


Rynar Solde's boots crunched over sand and shattered decking as he advanced, every step deliberate beneath the weight of his armor. The Beskar plates glinted faintly under the dull sky, scorched and scratched in places from past expeditions. His helmet's visor adjusted automatically, cycling through low-light, thermal, and particle scans, mapping the ruin with a precision that left nothing to chance. Every shadow, every glint, every uneven tile was cataloged silently in the HUD.


He paused at a collapsed doorway. Metal groaned softly under his touch. His gloved hands traced the worn sigils etched into the frame — ancient Imperial glyphs, blurred by centuries of sandstorms and decay. The silence was profound, but not comforting. It pressed against him like a weight, the kind that made every instinct scream for caution.


His mind flickered momentarily, unwanted, to someone far away. The thought lingered, fleeting, before he shoved it aside. Focus. Survival first. Memories were luxuries Horuz would not afford him.


Stepping through the doorway, he entered a vast chamber that had once served as a storage hub, now a graveyard of ancient technology. Databanks, their screens cracked and lifeless, jutted from the walls like tombstones. Piles of Imperial rations, long desiccated and useless, lay strewn across the floor. Rusted weapons, their casings corroded to orange dust, peeked from beneath collapsed support beams. Rynar's visor caught the faint gleam of a small, partially buried holocube — too faint to identify from a distance, but enough to pique curiosity.


He crouched, scanning. The multispectrum detector hummed softly as it swept the chamber. Electromagnetic signatures were weak, scattered, inconsistent — ancient systems that might still harbor power if he could find the source. Every beep, every faint pulse, told him something had survived the centuries. Something beyond the ruin itself.


Rynar's hand moved instinctively to his sidearm, not drawing it yet, just a prepared measure. His other hand brushed over the floor, over sand and shards of metal. Each fragment, each crack in the stone, spoke to him in a language he'd long learned to read. Collapsed staircases hinted at higher levels, unseen chambers. Bent conduits suggested former security systems that might still hum with residual energy.


The air shifted as he advanced further into the chamber. A faint glimmer caught the corner of his visor — subtle, almost imperceptible, like a reflection that shouldn't exist in a place with no active lights. He stopped. Scanner up, eyes narrowing behind the visor. The signal was faint but real: something beneath the debris, buried yet alive, waiting to be uncovered.


Every instinct Rynar had built over years of navigating forgotten, dangerous ruins screamed at him. The quiet wasn't emptiness; it was anticipation. The walls seemed to press closer, or maybe it was the oppressive history settling in his chest. He adjusted his pack, checked the seals on his armor once more, and stepped forward with measured precision.


The chamber's ceiling was jagged, broken in places, allowing pale, filtered light to catch dust motes swirling like miniature galaxies in the still air. He paused at the edge of the debris pile, fingers hovering near his scanner controls, ready to dig, ready to expose whatever had survived here.


Horuz was dead. Its storms unending, its cities long vanished. Yet here, in this forgotten chamber, the whisper of old power lingered — a secret waiting for someone patient enough to uncover it.


Rynar exhaled slowly. The weight of history pressed around him, heavy but not oppressive. This was why he came here. Not for glory, not for reward. For knowledge. For discovery. And for the certainty that, even in a galaxy that had long moved on, some things were never meant to be forgotten.


Rynar Solde moved deeper into the ruin. Dust swirled, the walls groaned under centuries of neglect, and the faint light glinted off something hidden in the debris. He inhaled through his filters, tightened his grip on his scanner, and whispered softly to himself:


"Let's see what Horuz has been hiding… and what's still worth remembering."

Varlo Finnall Varlo Finnall
Diarch Reign Diarch Reign
 
“This place was about as insignificant as a planet can get.”

Varlo said to the empty shuttle behind him. Outside of the system yet close enough for aid, sat The Triumphant, the Dictator III that served as the Diarch Reign’s personal flagship and mobile command station.

But here? On this dust ball that sat squarely between Mando and Diarchy space? There existed just Varlo Finnall, commander of the Myrmidons, Elite of the Elite of the Diarchy. And his quarry.


“The kid better have a good reason for sending me here. I can’t see how some historian is going to tip the balance of the war. But, he’s never steered us wrong before.”

With that, Varlo began to move, black phrik alloy plating and helmet made him appear as a shadow in the storm cloaked weather of Horuz. Except for the cape, shining gold, as with all Myrmidons. Like a streak of bold and brazen lightning behind him.

He came slowly to what looked like a settlement, his vibro-axe slung across his back and blaster rifle firmly at the ready. Varlo had survived countless campaigns at Reign’s side, he was not going to be felled during a simple snatch and grab.


“Where are you.. the Network dossier said he’d be here, likely scouring ruins.”
 
Rynar crouched over a toppled databank, fingers brushing away centuries of dust as he worked the ancient controls. His visor flickered as he attempted to interface with the remaining storage cores, scanning for anything worth salvaging. The air was stale, the chamber silent except for the soft hum of his scanner and the faint crunch of debris beneath his boots.

He didn't notice the subtle feedback spike until it was too late. A thin red light blinked on the terminal — a distress beacon he hadn't expected, triggered by the data pad's power surge. His heart skipped. He swore quietly under his breath, gloved hands moving to shut it down. The signal was brief, barely enough to reach off-planet, but enough.

"No… no, no, no," he muttered, toggling the override sequence. Sparks flared as the ancient circuits protested, but the light extinguished just as suddenly as it had appeared. Relief should have followed, but instead a tighter knot formed in his chest.

He exhaled slowly through the armor's filter, pressing a hand to the datapad as if that alone could erase the error. "Hopefully no one's actually listening…" he thought, glancing toward the chamber's shadowed corners. "Not that it matters… no one should be here. No one I know."

Even with the momentary panic, his thoughts drifted briefly — as they always did — to Dean. The image of her calm focus, always confident and steady, flickered through his mind. It was grounding, comforting… fleeting. He forced himself back to the task.

Somewhere above the dunes, a faint shimmer of movement caught his eye, just at the periphery of his visor's range. He froze. Was it a trick of the storms, or something else? His grip on the datapad tightened, ready to protect it and himself, even as the silence pressed in heavier than ever.


The ruin didn't feel empty anymore.

Varlo Finnall Varlo Finnall
 

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