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Faction Bad Decisions, Better Suits: Connections in the Highlife

Echelon: The Outer Rim
Neo-Echelon: Capital City
District 30: Highlife Heights
The Echane




If you wanted luxury accommodation, you came to Highlife Heights, assuming you could afford the entry surcharge, or your executive pass scanned green on the first try. Weather was tailored to perfection: a soft twilight glow, temperature locked somewhere at expensively comfortable, with an artificial breeze just strong enough to stir coats and dresses for those paying attention. Every walkway gleamed. Every view was lethal to look at twice. Accommodations were exclusive and availability was barely a rumor.

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Tonight's venue was The Echane

Every invited guest entered free of charge. Mission runners brushed shoulders with corporate executives, and many of the sharpest suits in Echelon belonged to the cityworld's most successful criminals. The dress code was enforced; questions about your profession were not. Tonight was about who you could meet, and who you absolutely shouldn't underestimate.

Hoverlimos pulled into place. Corporate shuttles descended on controlled gravway columns, insignias marked against polished hulls. Luxury speeders came off the speederways into secure automated bays, parked twenty levels deep. Human-looking HRD valets, smiling just too perfectly, took control of vehicles worth more than some districts' annual budgets.

Inside, the lobby unfolded like a statement piece. The welcoming desk was curved around in obsidian glass, marked with gold-lit circuitry; its clerks had subtle high-tier augments. Soft holo-patterns carried through the air, data mood motifs pretending to be art, while discreet dark-grey security doors slid open and shut, guiding guests deeper inside.

Past them lay the main lounge.

The room was vast without feeling empty, strangely intimate without crowding. Multi-level balconies and sculpted platforms overlooked a central floor where conversation flowed as freely tonight as the drinks. Corporate power brokers occupied dim alcoves upholstered in smart-fabric seating that adjusted to posture and mood. Mission runners leaned against durachrome railings, armor hidden beneath tailored coats, their eyes always moving.

Above, a slow-rotating holo-ceiling displayed Neo-Echelon's skyline at night, with artificial stars dispensing data and information feeds downward for fresh refils. Decor balanced warmth and opulence: dark woods inset with defining circuitry, genetically tuned indoor plants, and kinetic art moved subtly as people passed it.

Service was flawless and nearly omnipresent. HRD attendants moved through the crowd with crystal glasses and cut synth-ice to exacting time. The bar stretched along one wall like a shrine to corporatism, backlit rare spirits, cybernetic mixology dispensers, and a bartender whose implants read biometric tells before you ordered. Drinks arrived before you realized you wanted them. It all felt a little too good. At the far end, a live band played smooth synth-jazz layered with industrial eche-bass, filling silence without distracting attention.

Armorweave suit immaculate, two decisive HRD escorts flanking him, Balen Var Black moved through the room with a steady ease, shaking hands, exchanging names, making connections. His job tonight was to meet as many people as possible and remember each one.

"How am I doing?" he asked quietly.

"Optimal," a HRD replied. "Approval metrics adequate. Charisma expenditure within acceptable limits. You may continue being… yourself."

Black smirked. When the moment felt right, he stepped beside the band and tapped the holomic. Sound dampening increased and the room hushed.

"Alright, hey. Hi. Yes, that's me," he said, grinning under the light. "If you're holding a drink, don't stop. If you're not, that's on us, and we'll fix it." Laughter rippled. "Welcome to Highlife Heights. More importantly, welcome to the first function we are doing together like this. Not my first event," he added, gesturing at the extravagance, "but ours. Tonight isn't about hierarchy, job titles, or which morally questionable contract you signed yestreday."

He spread his hands. "It's about introductions. About seeing who's in the room. Realizing the person next to you might be a future ally, rival, employer, or the reason your next job goes sideways."

"So talk. mingle and make connections. Enjoy the music, your drinks, and the view you definitely didn't pay for. This cityworld runs on people willing to show up and build something together, and you're all here."


He lifted his glass.

"To new faces. New stories. And whatever comes next. We all start somewhere."

The band eased back in as the room came alive, brighter and louder than before.
 
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Ironwraith entered Highlife Heights with the quiet certainty of someone who did not need to announce himself.

His dress blues were immaculate — Republic-cut, tailored to precision, the deep navy fabric broken only by crisp silver trim and service ribbons that spoke of campaigns most people here only knew through filtered holoreels. His dress cap was tucked neatly beneath his left arm, posture straight without being rigid, shoulders squared like habit rather than performance.

The contrast was deliberate.

Around him, tailored excess and corporate vanity filled the space. Around him, people subtly adjusted their distance — not out of fear, but instinct. This was a man who looked like he belonged somewhere else, and survived long enough to be invited here.

He paused just inside, eyes sweeping the room in a practiced arc before settling briefly on Mr. Black. No salute. No nod that would draw attention. Just a fraction of acknowledgment — employer to asset, understood.

Only then did Ironwraith move toward the bar.

He set the cap carefully against the polished surface, fingers releasing it with the same care one might give a loaded weapon, and signaled for a drink. As the glass was slid toward him, he lifted it, inspecting the contents with faint suspicion.

"Fancy venue," he remarked dryly, voice low but not unfriendly.
A corner of his mouth twitched — not quite a smile.

"Back home, if the drink glows, it's usually trying to kill you."

He took a measured sip, exhaled once through his nose, and let his gaze drift back across the room — watching, cataloging, already working even as the music and chatter swelled around him.

Ironwraith remained where he was:
cap under arm, drink in hand,
a soldier in a room full of suits —
and entirely comfortable standing between both worlds.

Mr Black Mr Black
@Open
 
Ana arrived without spectacle, which in a place like Highlife Heights was its own kind of statement.

The grav-lift doors parted to admit her into The Echane's upper lobby, and for a brief moment the tailored twilight caught on the lines of her silhouette before she stepped fully inside. She was dressed formally, but with restraint — a long, structured coat in deep graphite-blue layered over a fitted ensemble of matte black and muted metallic accents. The fabric was high-grade and adaptive, falling cleanly when she stood still and flowing subtly when she moved. No visible weapons. No ostentatious augment display. Just refinement sharpened by intent.

Her hair was styled back from her face in a controlled, elegant sweep, leaving her brown eyes unobstructed as they took in the room. Jewelry was minimal: a slim wrist band, a single, understated earpiece disguised as ornamentation. Nothing that flashed wealth. Everything that suggested deliberation.

She cleared the entry scan on the first pass.

Inside, The Echane unfolded in layers—sound, light, influence—braided together so seamlessly that most guests stopped noticing where one ended, and the next began. Ana noticed immediately. She read the flow of bodies the way others read markets: who lingered, who moved with purpose, who spoke too much, and who let silence do the work for them. Corporate executives, mission runners, criminal powerbrokers dressed as philanthropists — the room was an ecosystem, and tonight it was feeding.

Her gaze found Black without effort.

Balen Var Black moved through the crowd with practiced ease, his presence subtly shaping conversations around him. Ana didn't approach at once. She watched, letting the cadence of the room settle, letting his words ripple outward and dissolve back into music and chatter. When he lifted his glass and the band resumed, she allowed herself a measured breath—not anticipation, not relief. Readiness.

Then something else drew her attention.

At the bar stood a man who did not blend in — not because he demanded notice, but because he did not attempt to. Dress blues amid tailored excess. Posture precise without being rigid. A bearing that suggested habit rather than performance. People unconsciously adjusted their spacing around him, not out of fear, but recognition. This was someone who belonged to structures most people here only brushed against.

Ana observed him without staring, cataloging details the way she always did. Soldier, likely. Experienced. Comfortable being out of place. Not here to impress anyone.

Interesting.

She moved at last, not toward the bar and not directly toward Black, but into the current between them. An HRD attendant appeared at her side as if summoned by probability alone, offering a crystal glass before she'd asked. Ana accepted it with a quiet nod, fingers resting lightly against the stem as the ambient hum of the room folded back in.

Only then did she close the distance to Black, unhurried and assured. When she spoke, it was pitched just for him—no projection, no performance.

"Impressive turnout," she said evenly, eyes sweeping the room once before returning to his. "You brought together people who don't usually share air—and got them to stay."

A brief pause. The faintest curve at the corner of her mouth—not for the room, just acknowledgment.

"And no one looks bored yet," she added. "That might be the real achievement."

She lifted her glass in a small, mirroring gesture to his, then let her attention drift outward again—analytical, alert, already working—as The Echane continued to pulse around them, unaware that one more sharp mind had quietly joined the gathering.

@open Ironwraith Ironwraith Mr Black Mr Black
 




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[]

Hellhound - DeathbyRomy ft. Jazmin Bean
Location: District 30: Highlife Heights
Tag: Mr Black Mr Black .. Ironwraith Ironwraith .. Ana Rix Ana Rix


The doors of Highlife Heights parted with a velveted sigh, and Allie J. stepped within as though crossing a threshold between the known and the blasphemous. Neon sigils pulsed along the walls like bulbous veins, casting illuminating hues upon the assembled revelers whose laughter rang almost hollow, almost rehearsed.

She brushed past a bouncer clad in immaculate finery, his smile frozen in a way that suggested something learned rather than felt, and pressed a few credits into his waiting palm. The exchange was swift, precise, and unspoken; an offering made to ensure that the club's many eyes would forget her face as easily as they had learned it.

She briefly paused just beyond the entryway, granting allowance for the atmosphere to seep into her bones. Music throbbed in arrhythmic waves, a sound that seemed less composed than summoned, while some patrons clung to corners in defiance of the musical tones; only focused on their drinks and conversations. She took in the scene with a careful, measuring gaze.

Some patrons, moved by the semi-soothing tunes, took to dancing, moving as if guided by invisible strings. In private booths, others conversed in hush tones, where whispers carried more weight than words, the sense that something vast and indifferent lurked beneath their perpetrated voices.

Only after committing these impressions to memory did she venture deeper, each step forward feeling like a descent into a living organism that watched her with ancient, unblinking curiosity. She hated being observed.

Moving through the crowd with a scholar's precision, her mind began etching faces into memory as though they were forbidden glyphs scrawled upon a cyclopean wall. Each visage she passed seemed subtly wrong; smiles that lingered a heartbeat too long, eyes reflecting the club's lights with an almost aquatic sheen, expressions caught between indulgence and hunger.


She catalogued them all without pause: the perfumed aristocrat leaning too close to his companion, the woman whose laughter never reached her eyes, the silent patron who watched the room as if waiting for a sign from some unseen depth. These faces, once witnessed, felt less like people and more like masks worn by an unknowable will that pulsed beneath Highlife Heights' glittering shell.

At last she reached the massive bar, a gleaming monolith of polished metal and glass that throbbed with activity. Several bartenders worked in tireless unison, their movements swift and almost inhuman, as they poured, shook, and served with a fervor bordering on ritual devotion.
Allie J. waited until one turned toward her, then calmly ordered a non-alcoholic drink, her request nearly falling into the blaring music like a quiet heresy.

She noted, with a faint inward satisfaction, the brief flicker of irritation it caused, an added burden upon an already strained system; as if by this small, deliberate act she could test whether the machinery of the club would falter, or merely adapt and continue its ceaseless, inscrutable labor.

A man, in his late forties and dressed to impress, stopped to check her out at the bar, his unwavering eyes examining her from head to toe. Allie J. turned her gaze upon him as one might regard a lesser, squirming thing and said,
"Whatever you think you are offering me, be it your charm, a free drink, or your relevance, it means less to me than the dust beneath this bar."

Her smile was thin and cruel as she continued, "I am not interested in you, nor in whatever fragile illusion of importance you believe you can perform for my benefit."

She lifted a finger and pointed toward the world behind him, adding coldly, "Now leave, before you test my patience and discover how unpleasant my temper can become."


 
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Bad Decisions, Better Suits

Tag: Ironwraith Ironwraith | Mr Black Mr Black | Ana Rix Ana Rix | Allie J. Allie J.

Aurelius sat in the back of his Fiora Oracle, nursing a glass of Scuro Malbec as he looked over the information on the holoprojector in front of him. As a newcomer to Echelon Prime, he intended to be well-informed. To know the movers and shakers, whose palms needed greasing and whose armories needed stocking. In many ways this world was like Denon, Coruscant, and so many other planets he had visited in the past: wealthy corporations ran the show, freely crushing any who opposed them beneath their well-polished heels while the little people did all they could to scratch out a living, the braver ones fighting back against the corpo scum.

Once upon a time, young Aurelius was one such little person; a Street Kid on the mean streets of Nar Shaddaa, jacking speeders and committing petty theft for a handful of creds. Nowadays, however, he felt he straddled the line between corpo and street, running a successful crime syndicate, yes, but also owning and operating several profitable front businesses. He had found that often the most lucrative modus operandi was to sell to one side, who would cause a problem for the other, and then sell them the solution, but he was more than well enough aware of the risk such dealings came with. Best to play it by ear, get a lay of the land, then make game plans.

Aurelius finished his glass of wine and closed the holoprojector's display as the airspeeder limo arrived at the destination. He stepped out as the doors opened, wearing a smart black suit from his own company, crosh-hide dress shoes, a gold-plated chronometer and a chromium, haysian gold, and voidstone ring on his right index finger.

As he made his way towards the bar, he observed the crowd, using his instincts honed through years at the sabacc table to get a read on who was who. Corpo and street kid tangoed here, and now the devil too would join the dance.
 
Ironwraith's attention shifted as the room subtly changed.
New voices. New footsteps. New vectors.

His eyes flicked toward the arrivals — cataloging attire, posture, proximity — before settling on a small cluster forming near the bar. One presence lingered longer than etiquette allowed, leaning just a little too comfortably into Allie J.'s space.
Ironwraith moved without urgency.

He closed the distance and placed a firm, steady hand on the man's shoulder — not a grip, not a threat. Just enough weight to be unmistakable. His voice was low, measured, and carried the kind of certainty that didn't invite debate.
"Gentleman," he said evenly, "you're needed elsewhere."

The man turned halfway, opened his mouth—
Ironwraith leaned in just enough to finish quietly.

"Now."

There was no shove. No raised tone. Just a pause — and then the man nodded, straightened, and excused himself with a muttered apology before disappearing back into the crowd.
Only once the space was clear did Ironwraith withdraw his hand and turn fully toward Allie J.

"My apologies," he said, offering a slight incline of his head. Polite. Professional.
"Crowds like this tend to forget where boundaries are."
He adjusted the cap still tucked beneath his arm and extended a hand.

"Ironwraith," he introduced simply. "I'm here on Mr. Black's behalf. Thought it best to make sure the evening stays… civil."
A faint hint of dry humor touched his expression.

"At least as civil as events like this ever get."

Mr Black Mr Black Ana Rix Ana Rix Aurelius Baldor Aurelius Baldor

Tags: Allie J. Allie J.
 
Ana registered Aurelius in the same instant he began reading the room.

Not because he stood out—Echane was full of people trying to do precisely that—but because he didn't rush to define himself. The suit was expensive without shouting, the jewelry chosen with intent rather than insecurity. Someone who understood value as leverage, not decoration. Someone who had learned the difference between being seen and being remembered.

She watched him the way she watched systems before committing to an entry point.

When he reached the bar and paused, Ana shifted position just enough that their lines naturally intersected. No interruption. No ambush. Simply placing herself where conversation could happen without effort.

Her gaze met his briefly, then slid away again, giving him space to choose whether to engage. When she spoke, it was calm, measured, and pitched only for him.

"You're not local," she said lightly, not accusatory—observational. "But you already know how to read a room that pretends it doesn't need reading."

She turned her glass slightly in her hand, the motion idle but deliberate.

"That usually means Nar Shaddaa… or somewhere that teaches the same lessons faster and less kindly."

Her eyes returned to him then, steady, curious rather than sharp.

"Highlife Heights is generous to newcomers," Ana continued. "As long as they understand that generosity isn't free. People here don't ask who you are. They ask what problems you solve—or create."

A brief pause, allowing the music and conversation to fill the space instead of rushing it.

"Ana," she offered, lifting her glass slightly—not a handshake, but an acknowledgment. "Just another guest enjoying the view."

The faintest smile touched her expression—not predatory, not guarded. Interested.

"So," she added, voice warm but precise, "are you here to learn how this city works… or to see how much it costs to change it?"

She let the question hang between them, unforced, while the devil joined the dance and the night continued pretending it was only entertainment.

Mr Black Mr Black Aurelius Baldor Aurelius Baldor
 




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[]

Hellhound - DeathbyRomy ft. Jazmin Bean
Location: District 30: Highlife Heights
Tag: @Mr. Black .. Ironwraith Ironwraith



Allie watched the man retreat into the bar's shifting gloom, his silhouette dissolving among the swaying bodies like a weak thought swallowed by a greater, uncaring mind, and she lifted her fingers in a lazy, exaggerated wave, a smirk curling her lips. The music throbbed like a heartbeat beneath the floor, the lights flickered with a swirling of changing colors, and she murmured into her glass, voice dry with sarcasm and finality, "Good riddance." Then she turned her attention to the newcomer, who opted to sport the military look.

She waved off the newcomer's apology with a slow, dismissive flick of her hand, her eyes tracing the armored man from helm to greaves as though she were cataloging some minor but curious specimen dredged up from the depths. The press of bodies around them heaved and murmured like a single, mindless organism, boundaries dissolving in its warm, suffocating tide, and she tilted her head with a thin, knowing smile.


"Crowds tend to be crowds," she said evenly, a dry edge creeping into her voice, "boundaries or not, but I suspect you want a thank you."

Allie let the moment stretch between herself and the newcomer, tasting it like a bitter draught, while she weighed the alien notion of civility against the far more familiar comfort of indifference; the bar pressing further in around them, a throbbing, many-limbed presence whose whispers gnawed at the edges of thought, and she wondered idly if tonight she would permit the masquerade of polite conversation.

Her instincts urged her toward silence, to become a fixed point of disregard, an island of self amid the seething mass, yet the armored man's continued presence tugged at her attention like a persistent, low-frequency hum that refused to be ignored. At last, she exhaled, eyes lifting to meet his visor with a glint of dry amusement, her voice slipping free as smooth and sharp as a blade drawn from silk.


"So, tell me," she said, fingers idly circling the rim of her empty glass, "how much does Mr. Black pay you to keep things civil in this charming little abyss you call an establishment?"

Allie quickly lifted her hand before the man could answer, a quiet, imperious gesture, and she turned instead toward the bar, summoning the female bartender with a glance honed by long habit. She ordered another deceptively tasty concoction, her voice calm and practiced amid the bar's throbbing murmur, then added, without so much as sparing the armored man a look, whether he'd like a drink as well, the question delivered with casual impassiveness.

Only then did she allow a thin, mocking curve to her lips as she said,
"And forgive me," the apology steeped in dry irony, "but I don't give my name out so freely, Ironwraith. Now, I believe you were on the cusp of answering my first question."


 
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Ironwraith regarded Allie's question with the same calm neutrality he carried through nearly every other situation — even amidst the thrumming pulse of bodies, music, and shifting lights.


He lifted his drink slowly, fingers brushing the polished rim, eyes scanning the crowd in subtle arcs before settling back on her gaze. His dress blues were impeccable, the navy fabric sharp and unwrinkled, silver trim catching glimmers of the bar's ambient glow. Even here, in the suffocating press of bodies, he carried himself like someone who belonged to a different world — disciplined, precise, and quietly observing.


"Minimum wage," he said, voice flat but carrying the faintest edge of dry irony. "Though I did choose it myself. Keeps the work honest… and my conscience cleaner than most in this place."


A measured exhale followed, deliberate, like a soldier drawing breath before a long watch. "I didn't come here for the credits. I came because I owed a debt — a promise to Balen's father. He and I… we had a tight bond. Pulled me out of a situation that would have cost me far more than money. Saved me when the odds were squarely against me."


His gaze held steady, unwavering, tone factual but not boastful. "I made him a promise. That if anything happened to him, I'd look after those he cared about. That's why I'm here. Not for the wage. Not for thanks. Just keeping a promise."


He set the glass down with precise care, gaze scanning the room briefly before returning to Allie. A faint, almost imperceptible smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth.


"So," he said, voice even but carrying the smallest thread of humor, "technically, the wage's my choice. Civility… well, that remains negotiable."


Mr Black Mr Black . Ana Rix Ana Rix Aurelius Baldor Aurelius Baldor
Tags: Allie J. Allie J.
 
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Bad Decisions, Better Suits

Tag: Ana Rix Ana Rix

Aurelius stepped up to the bar and ordered a glass of Port in a Storm, then turned to view the woman who approached him. He flashed a devilish grin at her. "You got me, Nar Shaddaa born and raised. Whenever I go somewhere new I like to get a lay of the land, scope out the scene, who does what and where they do it at." The bartender brought his drink which he gratefully took, giving them a tip and telling them to keep a tab open for him before returning his attention to the woman who introduced herself as Ana. "Aurelius. It's a pleasure to meet you, Ana," he said with a tilt of his glass. "Might be new to Echelon Prime, but I'm no stranger to the kinda games folks here like to play."

She claimed to be just another guest, but he could tell there was more to her than that. She was too observant, too sharp, to just be a passerby in the crowd. And he was not clueless to how her every action seemed calculated to intersect with him. "Just another guest, eh? No, I don't think so. You're too keen for that. I can tell you calculate everything like a droid, I've got those sabacc instincts." He took a sip of the fortified wine, then offered her another smile. "So, what's your angle really, signora? Don't worry, I can keep a secret." He already had a few guesses pertaining to her, but he'd keep those to himself for now, maybe follow up with Cassander after he left. As for Aurelius, the formal Epican term might give her a clue as to his allegiances, along with the platinum tree on his ring.
 
Ana accepted the moment with the same composure she had carried all evening, turning fully toward Aurelius only after he finished speaking. She let his grin exist without immediately answering it, eyes briefly dropping instead to the ring on his hand—not staring, not lingering, just long enough to register the symbol and file it away. Nar Shaddaa instincts recognized Nar Shaddaa markers.

When she did look back up, her expression held something warmer than before. Not indulgent, not flirtatious—but open enough to acknowledge the game he was playing.

"Your instincts aren't wrong," she said lightly, voice smooth and unhurried. "But they're jumping ahead of you." She gestured subtly with her glass toward the room around them—the bar, the crowd, the layered conversations unfolding in real time.

"Echelon isn't a place you pass through without watching first. Anyone who says otherwise either doesn't last long… or already owns something they're not admitting to." A pause, just long enough for the words to settle. Her tone never sharpened, never hardened.

"Tonight, I'm exactly what I said I am—a guest," she continued. "But that doesn't mean I'm careless. Or uninterested." The corner of her mouth curved faintly, more human now, as if she were allowing him a glimpse past the calculation he'd correctly identified.

"As for angles…" she added, meeting his gaze evenly, "I prefer to understand a room before I decide whether it needs one." She lifted her glass slightly, mirroring his earlier gesture—not a toast, not quite a challenge.

"And if you really can keep a secret," Ana finished, "then you'll know better than to ask for one too soon." There was no dismissal in her posture, no retreat. She remained where she was, attention balanced between him and the wider room—a woman clearly capable of leaving at any moment, yet choosing, deliberately, not to.

Aurelius Baldor Aurelius Baldor
 

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